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This article examines the origin, evolution and orientation of police subsequent to the conquest of Sind and assesses how policing, and to a substantial extent, the administration of criminal justice, became subservient to the larger aim and vision of the conqueror of Sind when confronted with the immediate and fundamental problem, that is, the territorial consolidation of the province and the subjugation of the tribals in the hinterlands. The background to the annexation of Sind is relevant because it was these issues and aspects that played an important role in the formulation and orientation of the police department and its evolution over the four years of Sir Charles Napier’s tenure. In this context, the article is sub divided into nine sections, first, the British interest in Sind, the ambitions of Sir Charles and the conquest of Sind, second, the administrative system initiated by Sir Charles and the position of Sind police in that system, third, the colonial priorities and the orientation of the Sind police, fourth, the police manpower and recruiting policies, fifth, the nature of crimes and their detection, sixth, the policy and orientation of Napier’s concept of criminal justice, seventh, the consolidation of the Upper Sind Frontier, eighth, the essence and orientation of Napier’s policing system and last, the impact of collaboration and codification on the policing of rural Sind.

Aftab Nabi, Dost Ali Baloch. (2010) Policing Colonisation The Evolution and Role of Sind Police and the Views of Sir Charles Napier on the Administration of Criminal Justice in Sind, Pakistan Journal of Criminology, Volume-02, Issue-3.
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