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Prohibition's Legacy: The Emergence of Provincial Policing in Nova Scotia, 1921–1932*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 July 2014
Abstract
The Depression is usually cited as the reason for the origins of provincial policing in Nova Scotia. This neglects the period preceding the Depression. In particular, the struggle to enforce prohibition between 1921 and 1929 resulted in the centralization of social control in Nova Scotia. Provincial policing became the unintentional public policy success of the prohibition era. A centralized temperance inspectorate formed the foundation of provincial policing. Moreover, between 1930 and 1932, the Nova Scotia Police was established to enforce the Nova Scotia Liquor Control Act which, in turn, generated revenue on behalf of an emerging welfare state. In the final analysis, provincial policing was influenced by middle-class prohibitionists, but it ultimately reflected the interests of state bureaucrats.
Résumé
L'origine du contrôle policier provincial en Nouvelle-Écosse est ordinairement attribuée à la Crise économique. C'est là ne pas tenir compte de la période qui a précédé la crise. Il faut notamment considérer la lutte, entre 1921 et 1929, pour le respect de la prohibition qui s'est soldée par la centralisation du contrôle social en Nouvelle-Écosse. Le contrôle policier provincial devint bien involontairement le succès politique de l'ère prohibitionniste. Un corps spécialisé d'inspecteurs en matière de tempérance servit de base au contrôle policier provincial. De plus, entre 1930 et 1932, le corps policier de la Nouvelle-Écosse fut créé pour appliquer la Nova Scotia Liquor Control Act [Loi pour le contrôle des boissons alcooliques de la Nouvelle-Écosse (traduction non-officielle)], qui, par ailleurs, généra des revenus au profit d'un état providence en émergence. Finalement, si le contrôle policier provincial a subi l'influence des prohibitionnistes de la classe moyenne, il reflétait ultimement les intérêts des bureaucrates de l'État.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Canadian Journal of Law and Society / La Revue Canadienne Droit et Société , Volume 7 , Issue 2 , Fall/automne 1992 , pp. 157 - 184
- Copyright
- Copyright © Canadian Law and Society Association 1992
References
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68. Only the period from October 1926 to September 1929 is covered. The period from May 1926 to September 1926 is omitted because Grant restructured some of the districts early in his tenure as Inspector-in-Chief. After September 1926, Pictou and Cumberland Counties changed districts. In May 1926, Cumberland was moved from District Four to Five, and Pictou from District Five to Four. This was most likely due to the Soy affair which is described below. By focusing on October 1926 to September 1929, there is a continuity in data.
69. These differences exist despite the fact Districts Four (64,534) and Seven (59,007) had similar populations. Figures are calculated from Dominion Bureau of Statistics, Seventh Census of Canada 1931, Volume 1, Summary (Ottawa: 1936) at 348Google Scholar, Table 1a: Population of Canada, by Counties or Census Divisions, 1851–1931.
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103. Ibid. at 37.
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106. Ibid. at 120.
107. P.A.N.S., Rhodes Papers, MG2 Vol. 649. There is extended correspondence in this file concerning the impact of highways on public expenditures.
108. See note 40.
109. Halifax Herald (30 May 1929).
110. The Halifax Herald displayed photographs of all the motor vehicle police during periodic intervals for the balance of 1929.
111. Forbes, “Prohibition and the Social Gospel in Nova Scotia,” supra, note 2 at 33.
112. Beck, supra, note 55 at 131.
113. Ibid. at 133.
114. Forbes, supra, note 2.
115. Grant, supra, note 48 at 52. On 1 September 1927, the New Brunswick Provincial Police was established with 23 members. This increased to 56 by 1 May 1928. In 1927–28, 78.2% (n=799) of the cases before the police were under the New Brunswick Liquor Act. This exceeded the activity of the Nova Scotia Police. See Grant at 53.
116. See Forbes, E. R., The Maritime Rights Movement, 1919–1927: A Study in Canadian Regionalism (Montreal: McGill-Queens University Press, 1979)Google Scholar.
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121. Talbot et. al., supra, note 93 at 239.
122. The role of the RCMP in controlling the unemployed during the depression is discussed in: Brown, L. A., “Unemployment Relief Camps in Saskatchewan, 1933–1936” in Greenway, W. K. and Brickey, S. L., eds, Law and Social Control in Canada (Scarborough: Prentice-Hall, 1978) at 190–218Google Scholar.
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125. Popham & Schmidt, supra, note 40 at 59.
126. Murphy found on the basis of observational data in one RCMP detachment that 68% of all police contacts with citizens were proactive, and 40% of such contacts were based upon liquor-related and motor investigations. See Murphy, supra, note 93 at 328.
127. The RCMP were not welcomed by the opposition Liberals. The Liberal's house leader complained in 1933 that 300 RCMP officers were not needed in a “law-abiding province.” He argued for a reduction in the force. See Beck, supra, note 55 at 146. In 1930, the Nova Scotia Police cost just over 5% of the budget but in 1933, the RCMP cost over 20% of the budget ($780,081). Despite this, the Liquor Commission had a surplus of $1,258,826, of which $576,926 was paid to the province. See First Report of the Nova Scotia Liquor Commission, September 30, 1931 at 11.; Fourth Report of the Nova Scotia Liquor Commission, September 30, 1934 at 9.
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130. Ibid. at 90–96.
131. Marquis, supra, note 15 at 71.
132. Ibid. at 72
133. Field, supra, note 15; Monkkonen, supra, note 128.
134. Field, ibid. at 47.
135. Ibid.
136. Monkkonen, supra, note 128 at 51.
137. Ibid. at 55.
138. Ibid.
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