内容简介
上海法租界警察是法国驻沪领事直接领导下的警察机构,是维持法国在沪乃至在华利益的重要力量。它兼具政治镇压和社会管理的双重功能,不仅对中国现代政治的发展产生了一定的影响,而且对塑造上海城市空间和都市文化发挥了不可缺少的重要作用。本书主要利用法国外交部档案馆、法国海外殖民档案馆、上海档案馆的档案资料,并结合法语、英语和中文的相关研究,对上海法租界警察的源起、组织机构、人事构成、社会管理和政治镇压的职能进行了全面的分析和论述。
作者简介
朱晓明,1981年生于山东淄博。现任教于中国人民大学国际关系学院政治学系。本硕毕业于华东师范大学历史系,博士毕业于法国里昂高等师范(Ecole Normale Superieure de Lyon),师从安克强(Christian Henriot)教授和许纪霖教授,主攻中国近现代史。
目录
Acknowledgement
Abstract
Introduction
Chapter Ⅰ The origin of the police in the French Concession
1 The legal bases of the police in the French Concession
2 Special geography of jurisdictions in Shanghai
3 Urbanisation and new challenges for the police
4 The network of the French Colonial Empire
Chapter Ⅱ Organisation of the police
1 Control of the police by the French Consul
2 Militarisation and professionalisation of the police
3 Organisations and functions of the police in the 1930s
4 Police costs and revenue
Chapter Ⅲ The police force in the French Concession
1 A multinational police force
2 Standards of recruitment
3 Training and the courses to become a policeman
4 Salaries and welfare benefits
5 Job stability and career
6 A day in the life of a policeman in Shanghai
Chapter IV Police and politics: A history of the political section of the police
1 Organisation of the Political Section and its functions
2 The Guomindang and the Chinese communists in the French Concession
3 The Japanese factor
General Conclusion
精彩书摘
《上海法租界的警察(1910-1937年)》:
From this comparison of salaries of French, Russian, Chinese and Vietnamese policemen in the French Concession, it can be concluded that salaries were differentiated not only by official rank, but also by racial hierarchy—the French were the most favoured, followed by the Russians, then the Vietnamese, with the Chinese being the least favoured.This racial hierarchy was also applied to the structure of the police force as a whole—French police were the leaders and managers, seconded by the Russians, with the Vietnamese and Chinese forming the labourers and the 'working classes'.
4.1.3 A comparison between the salaries of policemen and employees of other municipal services in the French Concession
In 1897, as found in the archives, the first complaint regarding the unequal levels of salary between police and employees from other municipal services was raised.The Chief of Police complained that salaries of employees in the Bureau of Public Works (Service des Travaux) and in the Secretariat were much higher than those of policemen.This was largely due to the fact that salaries within municipal services had been increased several times, whereas police salaries had not been increased in 14 years.For example, in July 1887, a tax collector's monthly salary was 90 taels, while that of a lst class NCO (sous—officier de lere classe) was 65 taels.Ten years later, the tax collector's salary had increased to 170 taels per month, but the NCO still received just 65 taels every month.Following this, police salaries were increased by 10—50 taels over the next two years, thus going some way to alleviate the problem.
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前言/序言
Acknowledgement
Firstly, and most importantly, I would like to thank my dissertation director: Mr. Christian Henriot, for guiding me through my research. His trust, patience and professional academic guidance has seen me through the last five years, whenever and wherever I needed his help. He pushed me ahead whenever I lost courage, when I was lost amongst the numerous archives and written work, and when I was beset with family issues and academic problems. He is one of the most responsible and the best professors that I have ever met, and I am very grateful to him for being such a good and kind dissertation director.
I would also like to thank Mr. Xu Jilin, co-director of my dissertation, for his encouragement and support during the years. Without his help, I could not have completed this research.
My sincere thanks also go to the archivists in the Diplomatic Archives of Paris and Nantes, Shanghai Municipal Archives, Service Historique de la Défense, and Archives Nationales d’outre-mer, for helping me to search the catalogues and for delivering the archives, which formed the basis of my research.
I’d like to thank Madame Feng Yi, Madame Zhang Yu, Mr. Fran.ois Guillemot, and MadameYamamoto Miyuki for helping me so much during my stay in the Institut d’Asie Oriental. I would also like to thank Clémence Andréys for helping me read the handwritten French archives; Isabelle Durand for making the beautiful maps in my dissertation; my dear friends Ni Xiaofang, Li Na, Xiao Qi and Ni Xiaoju for letting me share their small rooms whenever I stayed in Paris; and Dorothée Rihal, Lee Ju Ling, Sung Tzu-hsuan and Zhao Weiqing for their encouragement and thoughtful discussion during my writing process.
I would also like to thank the professors who helped a great deal during my research: Madame Jiang Jin, Madame Christine Cornet, Madame Xiaohong Xiao-Planes, Mr. Moullier Igor, Madame Marie Vogel, Mr. Jean-Marc Berlière and Mr. Emmanuel Blanchard. Thanks also go to Divya Castelino for her excellent copyediting. And, last, but not least, I would like to thank my parents and husband for supporting me unconditionally.
Abstract
Shanghai, a treaty port open to foreigners after the Nanjing Treaty, has been the subject for many studies not only for its abundant archives and research materials, but also its important role as the economic centre of China and a unique international platform where different cultures and political or social practices met and interacted.
Due to the existence of three different jurisdictions in the city (Chinese municipality, French Concession & International Settlement) with each following an individual trajectory in terms of institutional development, social regulation, and policing, Shanghai constitutes a very interesting place to observe the processes-and tensions, negotiations or compromises therein-that sustained the confrontation between ‘state’ and society, between competing ‘state’ powers, between China and colonizing powers.
The police in the French Concession was a police institution under the direct control of the French Consul in Shanghai. It was an important force designed to protect French interests in Shanghai and in China. It not only influenced modern Chinese politics but also played a significant role in constructing the urban space and culture of Shanghai.
The first chapter studies the legal bases of the police in the French Concession and the special context of Shanghai. By analyzing the relevant articles of Treaty of Nanjing, the Treaty of Whampoa, the Treaty of Tientsin, the Land Regulations and Règlement d’organisation de la Concession Fran.aise, the book establishes that the existence of police forces in the French Concession were not planned under the basic articles that regulated the foreign settlements in China and that the police came into existence at a time when Chinese local authorities were paralyzed during the Taiping and Small Sword rebellions in the city. The police came into being as a fait accompli. Shanghai witnessed rapid urbanization and population growth along with industrialization at the beginning of the twentieth century. As Shanghai became an important metropolis in China and beyond, many problems arose, including the rise of criminality, which brought new challenges to the police. The French police in Shanghai was also placed in the context of the French imperial network, as Shanghai became the most important French asset in China. Its police personnel came to be integrated with French colonial personnel, technology and information flows.
The second chapter concentrates on the evolution of police organization during the firstthreedecades of the twentiethcentury. The Frenchpolicewentt hrough several reforms under the leadership of Mallet, Fiori and Fabre, the three most important police chiefs in the French Concession. Mallet’s reform laid down the basic organization of the police, its militarization and the introduction of Vietnamese soldiers into the force. His far-sighted establishment of judicial identification in the Concession helped the French to synchronize with modern police techniques. During W.W. I, as most French policemen were mobilized and went back to Europe, the police went into a period of stagnation. The lack of European policemen led to the rise of Chinese policemen within the force. Fiori inherited this situation in 1919 and tried to take advantage of the Chinese connections between the police and the organized crime, which led to the controversial ‘pact with the devil’ and ultimately his forced departure in 1932. However during his eleven years of service, he upgraded police o
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