Post by account_disabled on Dec 21, 2023 5:07:10 GMT 1
State Police and co. The State Police is a civilian police force, but organized militarily. I'm not going to explain to you all the implications that this means because we won't stop, just know that it is for this reason that the Police have unions and the Carabinieri and the Guardia di Finanza, which are police forces but not military. The State Police has had this name since 1981, previously it was called the Public Security Guard Corps (hence the PS still in use to shorten the name, in fact PdS is too reminiscent of Occhetto) and those Guards had the same ranks as the Carabinieri and the GdF.
Now in the Police the degrees are called qualifications and, as I have often found reading here and there, few really know how they are structured, especially compared to those of the Carabinieri and the GdF. At first glance one would want to explain the entire hierarchy in detail, but since in the literature, in the end, the qualifications used are very few, we will Special Data only illustrate the most widespread ones and their connection with the others of the two main police forces. The qualifications of policemen that are usually read are only three, in ascending hierarchical order: Agent , Inspector and Commissioner .
And up to this point there are no problems, in a story of only policemen it is simple to understand who commands who, in fact, normally (unless one wants to build a conflict on hierarchical responsibility within a hypothetical police station) it would not be useful to nothing to know that an Inspector is actually a Deputy Inspector rather than a Chief Inspector , ditto for the Commissioners (for whom, let it be known, the top qualification is that of Assistant Deputy Police Commissioner , which has nothing to do with the Police Commissioner above). Problems arise, then, when we find ourselves mixing policemen and carabinieri in a story.
Now in the Police the degrees are called qualifications and, as I have often found reading here and there, few really know how they are structured, especially compared to those of the Carabinieri and the GdF. At first glance one would want to explain the entire hierarchy in detail, but since in the literature, in the end, the qualifications used are very few, we will Special Data only illustrate the most widespread ones and their connection with the others of the two main police forces. The qualifications of policemen that are usually read are only three, in ascending hierarchical order: Agent , Inspector and Commissioner .
And up to this point there are no problems, in a story of only policemen it is simple to understand who commands who, in fact, normally (unless one wants to build a conflict on hierarchical responsibility within a hypothetical police station) it would not be useful to nothing to know that an Inspector is actually a Deputy Inspector rather than a Chief Inspector , ditto for the Commissioners (for whom, let it be known, the top qualification is that of Assistant Deputy Police Commissioner , which has nothing to do with the Police Commissioner above). Problems arise, then, when we find ourselves mixing policemen and carabinieri in a story.