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Gendarmerie

A gendarmerie (/ʒɒnˈdɑːrməri, ʒɒ̃-/) is a military force with law enforcement duties among the civilian population. The term gendarme (English: /ˈʒɒndɑːrm/) is derived from the medieval French expression gens d'armes, which translates to "rural police" or "men-at-arms" (literally, "armed people").[1] In France and some Francophone nations, the gendarmerie is a branch of the armed forces that is responsible for internal security in parts of the territory (primarily in rural areas and small towns in the case of France), with additional duties as military police for the armed forces.[1] It was introduced to several other Western European countries during the Napoleonic conquests.[2] In the mid-twentieth century, a number of former French mandates and colonial possessions (such as Lebanon, Syria, the Ivory Coast and the Republic of the Congo) adopted a gendarmerie after independence.[3][4] A similar concept exists in Eastern Europe in the form of Internal Troops, which are present in many countries of the former Soviet Union and its former allied countries.

Members of Italy's Carabinieri on public order duties in Florence

Some of the more prominent modern gendarmerie organizations include the French National Gendarmerie, French National Guard, Spanish Civil Guard, the Romanian Jandarmeria, Algerian National Gendarmerie, Argentine National Gendarmerie, United States Constabulary, Burkinese National Gendarmerie, Italian Carabinieri, Chilean Carabineros, Moldovan Carabinieri, Royal Netherlands Marechaussee, the Royal Moroccan Gendarmerie, the Portuguese National Republican Guard, Serbian Žandarmerija, Mexican National Guard, Tunisian National Guard, Turkish Gendarmerie, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police/Gendarmerie royale du Canada, and the Royal Gendarmerie of Cambodia.[5]

Etymology

The word gendarme is a singular extracted from Old French gens d'armes (pronounced [ʒɑ̃ d‿ aʁm]), meaning "men-at-arms". From the Late Middle Ages to the Early Modern period, the term referred to a heavily armoured cavalryman of noble birth, primarily serving in the French army. The word gained policing connotations only during the French Revolution, when the Maréchaussée of the Ancien Régime was renamed to Gendarmerie.

Historically, the spelling in English was gendarmery, but now the French spelling gendarmerie is more common. The Oxford English Dictionary (OED) uses gendarmery as the principal spelling, whereas Merriam-Webster uses gendarmerie as the principal spelling.

Title and status

These forces are normally titled "gendarmerie", but gendarmeries may bear other titles, for instance the Carabinieri in Italy, the Guarda Nacional Republicana in Portugal, the Guardia Civil in Spain, the Royal Marechaussee in the Netherlands or Internal Troops/National Guard in Ukraine and Russia.

As a result of their duties within the civilian population, gendarmeries are sometimes described as "paramilitary" rather than "military" forces (especially in the English-speaking world where policing is rarely associated with military forces) although this description rarely corresponds to their official status and capabilities. Gendarmes are very rarely deployed in military situations, except in humanitarian deployments abroad.

A gendarmerie may come under the authority of a ministry of defence (e.g. Algeria, Netherlands and Poland), a ministry of the interior (e.g. Argentina, Romania, Turkey and Ukraine) or even both ministries at once (e.g. Chile, France, Italy, Portugal and Spain).[6] Generally there is some coordination between ministries of defence and the interior over the use of gendarmes. In addition, some gendarmeries can be part of a civilian police force, such as the Israel Border Police (Magav), which is the gendarmerie branch of the civilian Israel Police.

A few forces which are no longer considered military retain the title "gendarmerie" for reasons of tradition. For instance, the French language title of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police is Gendarmerie royale du Canada (GRC) (i.e., Royal Gendarmerie of Canada) because this force traditionally had some military-style functions (although separate from the Canadian Army) and has retained its status as a regiment of dragoons. The Argentine Gendarmerie is a military force in terms of training, identity and public perception, and was involved in combat in the Falklands War, however it is classified as a "security force" not an "armed force", to exercise jurisdiction over the civilian population under Argentine law.

Since different countries may make different use of institutional terms such as "gendarmerie", there are cases in which the term may become confusing. For instance, in the French-speaking Cantons of Switzerland the "gendarmeries" are the uniformed civil police (see: Gendarmerie (Switzerland)). In Chile, the word "gendarmerie" refers for historic reasons to the prison service (the "Chilean Gendarmerie"), while the actual gendarmerie force is called the "carabineros".

In some cases, a police service's military links are ambiguous and it can be unclear whether a force should be defined as a gendarmerie (e.g. Mexico's Federal Police, Brazil's Military Police, or the former British South Africa Police until 1980). Some historical military units, such as South-West Africa's Koevoet, were only defined as police for political reasons.[7] Services such as the Italian Guardia di Finanza would rarely be defined as gendarmeries since the service is of an ambiguous military status and does not have general policing duties amongst the civilian population. In Russia, the modern National Guard (successor of the Internal Troops) are military units with quasi-police duties but historically, different bodies within the Tsarist Special Corps of Gendarmes performed a variety of functions as an armed rural constabulary, urban riot control units, frontier guards, intelligence agents and political police. Prior to the creation of the Irish Free State in 1922, some policing was based on the Royal Irish Constabulary— initially an armed force located in police barracks, routinely unarmed after the 1880s when most civil unrest had subsided. Some consider this a gendarmerie, although this is tendentious as the subsequent Civic Guard of the Irish Free State were also uniformly armed but not described as a gendarmerie.

In China, after numerous reorganizations and transfers of control between the PLA and the MPS, the People's Armed Police, a gendarmerie services, was created on 19 June 1982. The establishment of the PAP highlighted the efforts to increase the professionalization of the security apparatus, as well as the absorption of numerous PLA demobilized personnel, in the wake of growing unrest.

In 2014 the Mexican Federal Police, a heavily armed force which has many attributes of a gendarmerie, created a new seventh branch of service called the National Gendarmerie Division. The new force would initially number 5,000 personnel and was created with the assistance of the French gendarmerie.[8]

Role and services

In comparison to civilian police forces, gendarmeries may provide a more disciplined force whose military capabilities (e.g., armoured group in France with armoured personnel carriers) make them more capable of dealing with armed groups and with all types of violence. On the other hand, the necessity of a more stringent selection process for military service, especially in terms of physical prowess and health, restricts the pool of potential recruits in comparison to those from which a civilian police force could select.

The growth and expansion of gendarmerie units worldwide has been linked to an increasing reluctance by some governments to use military units typically entrusted with external defence for combating internal threats.[1] A somewhat related phenomenon has been the formation of paramilitary units which fall under the authority of civilian police agencies. Since these are not strictly military forces, however, they are not considered gendarmerie.[5]

In France, the gendarmerie is in charge of rural areas and small towns (typically less than 10,000 inhabitants) which represent 95% of the territory and close to 50% of the population. Besides its territorial organization, it has crowd and riot control units (the Gendarmerie Mobile, along with some corresponding units in the civilian police), counter-terrorism and hostage rescue (GIGN, again along with some corresponding units in the civilian police), maritime surveillance, police at sea and coast guard (Gendarmerie maritime), control and security at airports and air traffic police (Gendarmerie des transports aériens), official buildings guard, honorary services and protection of the President (Garde Républicaine), mountain rescue (Peloton de Gendarmerie de Haute Montagne) and security of nuclear weapons sites.

French influence

The use of military organisations to police civilian populations is common to many time periods and cultures. Being a French concept, the French Gendarmerie has been the most influential model for such an organisation.

Many countries that were once under French rule and influence have a gendarmerie. Italy, Belgium and Austria have had gendarmeries through Napoleonic influence for instance but, while Italy still has the Italian equivalent known as the Carabinieri, Belgium and Austria's gendarmeries have merged with the civil police (in, respectively, 2001 and 2005). Many former French colonies, especially in Africa, also have gendarmeries. The Dutch Royal Marechaussee was created by King William I to replace the French Gendarmerie after French rule ended.

The national police force of Canada, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police is referred to in French as the Gendarmerie royale du Canada (GRC). However the RCMP is a mainly civilian organisation within Public Safety Canada. It is not part of the Canadian Department of National Defence, but does have a paramilitary wing and they have been awarded the status of a regiment of dragoons, with a military battle standard displaying their battle honours following service in World War I. Those honours include Northwest Canada, South Africa, The Great War, and the Second World War.

A common gendarmerie symbol is a flaming grenade, first used as insignia by the French force.

Role in modern conflicts

Gendarmes play an important role re-establishing law and order in conflict areas, a task which is suited to their purpose, training and capabilities.[9][10] Gendarmeries are widely used for internal security and in peacekeeping operations, for instance in the former Yugoslavia[9] and in Ivory Coast,[11] sometimes via the European Gendarmerie Force.[12]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Lioe, Kim Eduard (2010-12-03). Armed Forces in Law Enforcement Operations? - The German and European Perspective (1989 ed.). Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg. pp. 52–57. ISBN 978-3-642-15433-1.
  2. ^ Emsley, Clive (1999). Gendarmes and the State in Nineteenth-Century Europe (1999 ed.). Oxford University Press. pp. 52–57. ISBN 978-0198207986.
  3. ^ Deep, Daniel (2012). Occupying Syria Under the French Mandate: Insurgency, Space and State Formation. Cambridge University Press. p. 204. ISBN 978-1-107-00006-3.
  4. ^ Clark, John; Decalo, Samuel (2012). Historical Dictionary of Republic of the Congo. Lanham: Scarecrow Press. pp. 44–49. ISBN 978-0-8108-7989-8.
  5. ^ a b Kumar, Kuldeep (2016-04-14). Police and Counterinsurgency: The Untold Story of Tripura's COIN Campaign (2016 ed.). SAGE Publications India. pp. 90–94. ISBN 978-9351507475.
  6. ^ Lutterbeck, Derek (2013). The Paradox of Gendarmeries : Between Expansion, Demilitarization and Dissolution (PDF). Geneva: Geneva Centre for the Democratic Control of Armed Forces (DCAF). ISBN 9789292222864. SSR Paper 8. (PDF) from the original on 8 December 2019. Retrieved 8 December 2019.
  7. ^ Binaifer Nowrojee, Bronwen Manby (1993). Accountability in Namibia: Human rights and the transition to democracy (2001 ed.). Human Rights Watch. pp. 17–20. ISBN 978-1-56432-117-6.
  8. ^ The Economist, August 23, 2014, pp. 30–31.
  9. ^ a b "composition of the KFOR". from the original on 2012-05-08. Retrieved 2012-03-21.
  10. ^ Giovanni Arcudi, Forces de police et forces armées, sécurité et défense: où sont les frontières? 2016-10-18 at the Wayback Machine, Cahier du GIPRI, n° 2, pp. 17-64.
  11. ^ official website of the French Defence Ministry 2011-09-21 at the Wayback Machine (in French)
  12. ^ Arcudi, Giovanni; Smith, Michael E. (2013). "The European Gendarmerie Force: A solution in search of problems?". European Security. 22: 1–20. doi:10.1080/09662839.2012.747511.

gendarmerie, this, article, about, concept, bodies, called, disambiguation, gendarme, redirects, here, other, uses, gendarme, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, re. This article is about the concept For bodies called Gendarmerie see Gendarmerie disambiguation Gendarme redirects here For other uses see Gendarme disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Gendarmerie news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message A gendarmerie ʒ ɒ n ˈ d ɑːr m er i ʒ ɒ is a military force with law enforcement duties among the civilian population The term gendarme English ˈ ʒ ɒ n d ɑːr m is derived from the medieval French expression gens d armes which translates to rural police or men at arms literally armed people 1 In France and some Francophone nations the gendarmerie is a branch of the armed forces that is responsible for internal security in parts of the territory primarily in rural areas and small towns in the case of France with additional duties as military police for the armed forces 1 It was introduced to several other Western European countries during the Napoleonic conquests 2 In the mid twentieth century a number of former French mandates and colonial possessions such as Lebanon Syria the Ivory Coast and the Republic of the Congo adopted a gendarmerie after independence 3 4 A similar concept exists in Eastern Europe in the form of Internal Troops which are present in many countries of the former Soviet Union and its former allied countries Members of Italy s Carabinieri on public order duties in Florence A Turkish Gendarmerie General Command on guard at Topkapi Palace in Istanbul Some of the more prominent modern gendarmerie organizations include the French National Gendarmerie French National Guard Spanish Civil Guard the Romanian Jandarmeria Algerian National Gendarmerie Argentine National Gendarmerie United States Constabulary Burkinese National Gendarmerie Italian Carabinieri Chilean Carabineros Moldovan Carabinieri Royal Netherlands Marechaussee the Royal Moroccan Gendarmerie the Portuguese National Republican Guard Serbian Zandarmerija Mexican National Guard Tunisian National Guard Turkish Gendarmerie the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Gendarmerie royale du Canada and the Royal Gendarmerie of Cambodia 5 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Title and status 3 Role and services 4 French influence 5 Role in modern conflicts 6 See also 7 ReferencesEtymology EditThe word gendarme is a singular extracted from Old French gens d armes pronounced ʒɑ d aʁm meaning men at arms From the Late Middle Ages to the Early Modern period the term referred to a heavily armoured cavalryman of noble birth primarily serving in the French army The word gained policing connotations only during the French Revolution when the Marechaussee of the Ancien Regime was renamed to Gendarmerie Historically the spelling in English was gendarmery but now the French spelling gendarmerie is more common The Oxford English Dictionary OED uses gendarmery as the principal spelling whereas Merriam Webster uses gendarmerie as the principal spelling Title and status EditThese forces are normally titled gendarmerie but gendarmeries may bear other titles for instance the Carabinieri in Italy the Guarda Nacional Republicana in Portugal the Guardia Civil in Spain the Royal Marechaussee in the Netherlands or Internal Troops National Guard in Ukraine and Russia As a result of their duties within the civilian population gendarmeries are sometimes described as paramilitary rather than military forces especially in the English speaking world where policing is rarely associated with military forces although this description rarely corresponds to their official status and capabilities Gendarmes are very rarely deployed in military situations except in humanitarian deployments abroad A gendarmerie may come under the authority of a ministry of defence e g Algeria Netherlands and Poland a ministry of the interior e g Argentina Romania Turkey and Ukraine or even both ministries at once e g Chile France Italy Portugal and Spain 6 Generally there is some coordination between ministries of defence and the interior over the use of gendarmes In addition some gendarmeries can be part of a civilian police force such as the Israel Border Police Magav which is the gendarmerie branch of the civilian Israel Police A few forces which are no longer considered military retain the title gendarmerie for reasons of tradition For instance the French language title of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police is Gendarmerie royale du Canada GRC i e Royal Gendarmerie of Canada because this force traditionally had some military style functions although separate from the Canadian Army and has retained its status as a regiment of dragoons The Argentine Gendarmerie is a military force in terms of training identity and public perception and was involved in combat in the Falklands War however it is classified as a security force not an armed force to exercise jurisdiction over the civilian population under Argentine law Since different countries may make different use of institutional terms such as gendarmerie there are cases in which the term may become confusing For instance in the French speaking Cantons of Switzerland the gendarmeries are the uniformed civil police see Gendarmerie Switzerland In Chile the word gendarmerie refers for historic reasons to the prison service the Chilean Gendarmerie while the actual gendarmerie force is called the carabineros In some cases a police service s military links are ambiguous and it can be unclear whether a force should be defined as a gendarmerie e g Mexico s Federal Police Brazil s Military Police or the former British South Africa Police until 1980 Some historical military units such as South West Africa s Koevoet were only defined as police for political reasons 7 Services such as the Italian Guardia di Finanza would rarely be defined as gendarmeries since the service is of an ambiguous military status and does not have general policing duties amongst the civilian population In Russia the modern National Guard successor of the Internal Troops are military units with quasi police duties but historically different bodies within the Tsarist Special Corps of Gendarmes performed a variety of functions as an armed rural constabulary urban riot control units frontier guards intelligence agents and political police Prior to the creation of the Irish Free State in 1922 some policing was based on the Royal Irish Constabulary initially an armed force located in police barracks routinely unarmed after the 1880s when most civil unrest had subsided Some consider this a gendarmerie although this is tendentious as the subsequent Civic Guard of the Irish Free State were also uniformly armed but not described as a gendarmerie In China after numerous reorganizations and transfers of control between the PLA and the MPS the People s Armed Police a gendarmerie services was created on 19 June 1982 The establishment of the PAP highlighted the efforts to increase the professionalization of the security apparatus as well as the absorption of numerous PLA demobilized personnel in the wake of growing unrest In 2014 the Mexican Federal Police a heavily armed force which has many attributes of a gendarmerie created a new seventh branch of service called the National Gendarmerie Division The new force would initially number 5 000 personnel and was created with the assistance of the French gendarmerie 8 Role and services EditIn comparison to civilian police forces gendarmeries may provide a more disciplined force whose military capabilities e g armoured group in France with armoured personnel carriers make them more capable of dealing with armed groups and with all types of violence On the other hand the necessity of a more stringent selection process for military service especially in terms of physical prowess and health restricts the pool of potential recruits in comparison to those from which a civilian police force could select The growth and expansion of gendarmerie units worldwide has been linked to an increasing reluctance by some governments to use military units typically entrusted with external defence for combating internal threats 1 A somewhat related phenomenon has been the formation of paramilitary units which fall under the authority of civilian police agencies Since these are not strictly military forces however they are not considered gendarmerie 5 In France the gendarmerie is in charge of rural areas and small towns typically less than 10 000 inhabitants which represent 95 of the territory and close to 50 of the population Besides its territorial organization it has crowd and riot control units the Gendarmerie Mobile along with some corresponding units in the civilian police counter terrorism and hostage rescue GIGN again along with some corresponding units in the civilian police maritime surveillance police at sea and coast guard Gendarmerie maritime control and security at airports and air traffic police Gendarmerie des transports aeriens official buildings guard honorary services and protection of the President Garde Republicaine mountain rescue Peloton de Gendarmerie de Haute Montagne and security of nuclear weapons sites French influence EditThe use of military organisations to police civilian populations is common to many time periods and cultures Being a French concept the French Gendarmerie has been the most influential model for such an organisation Many countries that were once under French rule and influence have a gendarmerie Italy Belgium and Austria have had gendarmeries through Napoleonic influence for instance but while Italy still has the Italian equivalent known as the Carabinieri Belgium and Austria s gendarmeries have merged with the civil police in respectively 2001 and 2005 Many former French colonies especially in Africa also have gendarmeries The Dutch Royal Marechaussee was created by King William I to replace the French Gendarmerie after French rule ended The national police force of Canada the Royal Canadian Mounted Police is referred to in French as the Gendarmerie royale du Canada GRC However the RCMP is a mainly civilian organisation within Public Safety Canada It is not part of the Canadian Department of National Defence but does have a paramilitary wing and they have been awarded the status of a regiment of dragoons with a military battle standard displaying their battle honours following service in World War I Those honours include Northwest Canada South Africa The Great War and the Second World War A common gendarmerie symbol is a flaming grenade first used as insignia by the French force Role in modern conflicts EditGendarmes play an important role re establishing law and order in conflict areas a task which is suited to their purpose training and capabilities 9 10 Gendarmeries are widely used for internal security and in peacekeeping operations for instance in the former Yugoslavia 9 and in Ivory Coast 11 sometimes via the European Gendarmerie Force 12 See also EditList of gendarmeries National Guard Carabinier Carabinieri Constabulary Internal Troops Security forces Paramilitary Militia Border guard Coast guard Militarization of police European Gendarmerie Force Martial lawReferences Edit a b c Lioe Kim Eduard 2010 12 03 Armed Forces in Law Enforcement Operations The German and European Perspective 1989 ed Springer Verlag Berlin Heidelberg pp 52 57 ISBN 978 3 642 15433 1 Emsley Clive 1999 Gendarmes and the State in Nineteenth Century Europe 1999 ed Oxford University Press pp 52 57 ISBN 978 0198207986 Deep Daniel 2012 Occupying Syria Under the French Mandate Insurgency Space and State Formation Cambridge University Press p 204 ISBN 978 1 107 00006 3 Clark John Decalo Samuel 2012 Historical Dictionary of Republic of the Congo Lanham Scarecrow Press pp 44 49 ISBN 978 0 8108 7989 8 a b Kumar Kuldeep 2016 04 14 Police and Counterinsurgency The Untold Story of Tripura s COIN Campaign 2016 ed SAGE Publications India pp 90 94 ISBN 978 9351507475 Lutterbeck Derek 2013 The Paradox of Gendarmeries Between Expansion Demilitarization and Dissolution PDF Geneva Geneva Centre for the Democratic Control of Armed Forces DCAF ISBN 9789292222864 SSR Paper 8 Archived PDF from the original on 8 December 2019 Retrieved 8 December 2019 Binaifer Nowrojee Bronwen Manby 1993 Accountability in Namibia Human rights and the transition to democracy 2001 ed Human Rights Watch pp 17 20 ISBN 978 1 56432 117 6 The Economist August 23 2014 pp 30 31 a b composition of the KFOR Archived from the original on 2012 05 08 Retrieved 2012 03 21 Giovanni Arcudi Forces de police et forces armees securite et defense ou sont les frontieres Archived 2016 10 18 at the Wayback Machine Cahier du GIPRI n 2 pp 17 64 official website of the French Defence Ministry Archived 2011 09 21 at the Wayback Machine in French Arcudi Giovanni Smith Michael E 2013 The European Gendarmerie Force A solution in search of problems European Security 22 1 20 doi 10 1080 09662839 2012 747511 Gendarmerie at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gendarmerie amp oldid 1150928997, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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