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23 years after its emergence, the PSNI is still less than one third Catholic and the numbers attempting to join are according to the Chief Constable "below what's needed". Its latest recruitment campaign attracted a total of 3,500 applications but only 27% are perceived to be Catholic. The PSNI was born out of the Patten reforms of the old RUC but the changes which reforms brought about were painful for many who saw them as a betrayal. The controversial 50/50, Catholic / Protestant recruitment policy was seen as discrimination against Protestants.
Allison Morris joins Ciarán Dunbar to explain the background of the PSNI and the current difficulties it faces.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Belfast Telegraph4.5
2626 ratings
23 years after its emergence, the PSNI is still less than one third Catholic and the numbers attempting to join are according to the Chief Constable "below what's needed". Its latest recruitment campaign attracted a total of 3,500 applications but only 27% are perceived to be Catholic. The PSNI was born out of the Patten reforms of the old RUC but the changes which reforms brought about were painful for many who saw them as a betrayal. The controversial 50/50, Catholic / Protestant recruitment policy was seen as discrimination against Protestants.
Allison Morris joins Ciarán Dunbar to explain the background of the PSNI and the current difficulties it faces.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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