Policing a Socialist Society: The German Democratic Republic
By (Author) Nancy T. Wolfe
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th January 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Police and security services
Cultural studies
363.20943
Hardback
264
What was it like to live under the police and a criminal justice system in a socialist society and in a country governed by Marxist-Leninists This is the first book-length study of criminal justice in the German Democratic Republic. Based on first-hand research conducted over a six-year period from 1985 to the present, the case study analyzes how the society has been transformed politically, socially, and economically since the 1989 revolution and reincorporation with the rest of Germany. This volume should be of interest to students, teachers, and professionals in criminal justice and sociology, political science, law, and European history. This analysis of policing in a socialist society reports on the work of the People's Police and the State Security Police and how principles of criminal justice and methods of governance changed with the dissolution of the GDR. The study relies on primary source materials and extensive interviews of police professionals and academicians in the field of criminal justice.
"One who really wants to comprehend the events of the decline of the GDR, who wants to know how it really was in the fall of 1989, and who would like retrospectively to evaluate the role of the police and the Ministry of State Security, will not be able nor want to ignore this book."-Ernst-Dieter Erdmann Chairman of the committee that dissolved the Stasi in East Berlin
This is a careful book about an extremely complex group of administrative structures.-The Library Letter
"This is a careful book about an extremely complex group of administrative structures."-The Library Letter
NANCY TRAVIS WOLFE is Professor at the College of Criminal Justice, University of South Carolina. She has lived in East Germany for many months during each of the last six years and has researched this subject intensively. She is the author of many articles in professional journals on criminal justice in Germany, socialist justice, corrections, and the preventive functions of courts.