Public co-operation The historian Charles Reith explained in his
New Study of Police History (1956) that Sir Robert Peel's principles constituted an approach to policing "unique in history and throughout the world, because it derived, not from fear, but almost exclusively from public co-operation with the police, induced by them designedly by behaviour which secures and maintains for them the approval, respect and affection of the public". The UK government
Home Office in 2012 explained policing by consent as "the power of the police coming from the common consent of the public, as opposed to the power of the state. It does not mean the consent of an individual" and added an additional statement outside of the Peelian principles: "No individual can choose to withdraw his or her consent from the police, or from a law." A study in 2021 described the notion of policing by consent in three terms: "that the police are 'citizens in uniform'; that the primary duty of the police is to the public, not the state; and that the use of force is a last resort." Another study contrasts policing by consent with 'policing by law' and states: "Even though the basic premise of policing in UK is by consent, the British Police system as it exists now is more a reverse process of investing more power in people by law, than policing by consent. As such, the policing in UK has now become policing by law, but a law which mandates a police which is accountable to public."
International influence in London The influence of this philosophy can still be found today in many parts of the
Commonwealth of Nations, including Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. It is also seen in the
police forces of the Crown dependencies and British Overseas Territories. The British model of policing influenced policing in the United States; the principles informed the American
community policing movement in the 1960s and are still a component of more recent policing doctrine. American law-enforcement reformer
William Bratton called them "my bible" in 2014, but others commented in 2020 that the application of the principles in the US appears "increasingly theoretical". and in
Northern Ireland. During a period of time when Hong Kong was a British colony, and for a time afterwards, the concept of policing by consent was applied, but some argue that the approach has since faded out. The concept has been applied to other countries as well, whose police forces are
routinely unarmed. Some countries, such as Finland, Norway and other
Nordic countries developed a consensual model of policing independently of the Peelian principles.
Public-order policing protests in London in 2009. Nonetheless, public order policing presents challenges to the approach of policing by consent. The
death of Ian Tomlinson after being struck by a police officer during the 2009
G-20 summit protests sparked a debate in the UK about the relationship between the police, media and public, and the independence of the
Independent Police Complaints Commission. In response to the concerns, the Chief Inspector of Constabulary,
Denis O'Connor, published
a 150-page report in November 2009 that aimed to restore Britain's consent-based model of policing. Policing by consent remained a central consideration for police in the United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland while enforcing temporary laws during the
COVID-19 pandemic.
Police use of firearms Calls for the routine arming of police officers with firearms have consistently been resisted in the United Kingdom. With a long history of unarmed policing,
police use of firearms in the United Kingdom is much more limited than
in many other countries. The UK is one of only 19 nations which have police forces that are
routinely unarmed; these countries also have comparatively restrictive rules on civilian gun ownership. The increased use of tasers in the UK was recognised as a fundamental shift in policing, and criticised as damaging policing by consent. One study wrote that the "fact that officers operate largely unarmed is a key tenet and manifestation of [policing by consent]." ==See also==