During the years between the Civil War and World War II police in New York City struggled with how to control a diverse metropolis. In <i>Police and the Empire City</i> Matthew Guariglia tells the history of the New York Police Department to show how its origins were built upon and inseparably entwined with the history of race ethnicity and whiteness in the United States. Guariglia explores the New York City Police Department through its periods of experimentation and violence as police experts imported tactics from the US occupation of the Philippines and Cuba devised modern bureaucratic techniques to better suppress Black communities and infiltrated supposedly unknowable immigrant neighborhoods. Innovations ranging from recruiting Chinese Italian and German police to form ethnic squads to the use of deportation and federal immigration restrictions to control local crime-even the introduction of fingerprinting-were motivated by attempts to govern a multiracial city. Campaigns to remake the police department created an urban landscape where power gender sexuality race ethnicity crime and bodies collided and provided a foundation for the supposedly color-blind technocratic federally backed and surveillance-based policing of today.
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