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The union's activities were strictly focused on the maintenance of political order, with routine crime and criminals outside its area of interest. Information on political radicals and subversive organizations were exchanged between officials of the member agencies at meetings held one to three times
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Early proposals to expand the police union to include political and secret police agencies outside the German-speaking world ultimately did not bear fruit, though occasional instances of cooperation – usually through middlemen – with law enforcement agencies in
Belgium, Denmark and Britain are
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annually. Between meetings, information would be disseminated about wanted political opponents among the member agencies through weekly magazines that would be published by the union for distribution to its participating forces. The union also recruited agents in
130:, which performed largely similar functions. The Central Investigating Agency and Information Office were both strictly intelligence agencies, with no police power of their own. The two institutions would occasionally exchange intelligence with each other.
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calling for cross-border cooperation in the policing of political radicals. As a result of von
Hinckeldey's letter, a conference was held on 9 April 1851 in Dresden attended by staff from the secret police services of the independent states of
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all experiencing various levels of domestic unrest. In response to the events of three years prior, in 1851, the police president of Berlin – Karl Ludwig
Friedrich von Hinckeldey – sent letters to law enforcement officials in
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The successful suppression of seditious elements within German-speaking states led to the permanent suspension of the
Central Investigating Agency in 1842, its services no longer needed.
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The Police Union of German States has been described as the first known instance of formally institutionalized international law enforcement cooperation.
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was the first known initiative for international law enforcement cooperation. Established in 1851 in response to the
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Policing
Cooperation Across Borders: Comparative Perspectives on Law Enforcement within the EU and Australia
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The Police Union of German States was established after an 1851 meeting of secret police chiefs in
Dresden.
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to gather intelligence on dissidents and radicals operating beyond the reach of its member agencies.
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The union was an informal grouping that was never solemnized by formal treaties or compacts.
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Policing World
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In 1833 a centralized internal security service was established by the
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The union was dissolved in 1866 with the outbreak of the
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was rocked by a series of revolts and revolutions with
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19:Police Union of German States
500:Jennings, Wesley G. (2016).
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539:Law enforcement in Germany
431:10.1177/105756779600600103
444:Hufnagel, Saskia (2016).
269:Bavarian Political Police
238:Operations and activities
473:Deflem, Mathieu (2004).
385:(subscription required)
373:Encyclopedia Britannica
287:Prussian Secret Police
215:Dissolution and legacy
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365:"Revolutions of 1848"
339:Härter, Karl (2019).
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211:recorded.
120:bookstores
106:Background
32:Founded at
450:Routledge
283:(Austria)
145:Formation
116:Frankfurt
42:Dissolved
24:Formation
263:See also
253:Brussels
245:New York
227:and the
378:5 April
274:Europol
201:Austria
197:Prussia
188:Dresden
180:Hanover
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163:Hungary
159:Prussia
155:Austria
101:History
61:Region
36:Dresden
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249:London
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184:Saxony
175:France
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151:Europe
78:German
293:Notes
257:Paris
128:Mainz
508:ISBN
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