Would you agree to the principles of organization and administration prescribed by Robert Peel? Elaborate your conviction.
Answers
In 1829, Sir Robert Peel established the London Metropolitan Police Force. He became known as the “Father of Modern Policing,” and his commissioners established a list of policing principles that remain as crucial and urgent today as they were two centuries ago. They contain three core ideas and nine principles.
Answer:
Robert Peel gave the 9 policing principles..
Explanation:
He was the eldest son of a wealthy cotton manufacturer, Robert Peel (1750–1830), who was made a baronet by William Pitt the Younger. The younger Robert was educated at Harrow and at Oxford, and, with his father’s money, a parliamentary seat was found for him as soon as he came of age, in 1809.
Peel, a staunch government supporter, was appointed undersecretary for war and colonies in 1810. He accepted the difficult position of Chief Secretary for Ireland two years later. He established a reputation as a skilled and incorruptible administrator there, and at the end of his Irish secretaryship, he was marked for early promotion. He had also distinguished himself as the most capable member of the "Protestant" party that opposed the admission of Roman Catholics to Parliament, and in 1817 he was elected as a member of Parliament for the University of Oxford. Despite declining immediate office upon his return from Ireland, he was appointed chairman of the important currency commission that resulted in the return to the gold standard in 1819.
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