<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rdf:RDF
  xmlns:crm="http://www.cidoc-crm.org/rdfs/cidoc_crm_v5.0.2_english_label.rdfs#"
  xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
  xmlns:dcterms="http://purl.org/dc/terms/"
  xmlns:edm="http://www.europeana.eu/schemas/edm/"
  xmlns:foaf="http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/"
  xmlns:ore="http://www.openarchives.org/ore/terms/"
  xmlns:owl="http://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#"
  xmlns:rdaGr2="http://rdvocab.info/ElementsGr2/"
  xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#"
  xmlns:rdfs="http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#"
  xmlns:skos="http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#"
  xmlns:svcs="http://rdfs.org/sioc/services#"
  xmlns:wgs84_pos="http://www.w3.org/2003/01/geo/wgs84_pos#" xmlns:xalan="http://xml.apache.org/xalan">
  <edm:ProvidedCHO rdf:about="EULAC_6698">
    <dc:identifier>EULAC_6698</dc:identifier>
    <dc:title>Dalton McConney MBE QPM</dc:title>
    <dc:description>"Dalton McConney is a retired Metropolitan Police Chief Inspector. He mostly served as a uniformed officer in South London and came to prominence following the second Brixton riots  In the mid-eighties. He was born in Barbados and educated at Ebenezer Boys and the Modern High School. He worked as a proof reader at the Barbados Advocate newspaper and at the Government Printing Office before joining the economic migration to the UK in I960.\r\nAged 36, he joined the Metropolitan Police in 1976. He served as a Constable at Battersea, Sergeant at Belgravia and a Recruit Instructor at Hendon Police College. He obtained the Certificate of Education (University of London), helped to research the new Police &amp; Criminal Evidence Act 1984, updated the Training Manual and taught the changes in the Act to instructors. He passed the Inspector\u2019s examination in 1988 and was posted to Brixton after the second riots.\r\nHe was the first senior black officer to serve at Brixton Police Station in the Borough of Lambeth. gaining  the trust of residents and helping to lower tensions. He also set up the \u201cBrixton Summer Project\u201d during the school holidays,  engaging local unemployed youth as staff.  A two-part C4 documentary,  \u201cThe Brixton Beat\u201d,  highlighted Dalton\u2019s role in the changes at Brixton. He received a Lambeth Civic Award,  the Mayor\u2019s Special Award and  in 1994 was awarded  the MBE for Police\/Community Service.\r\nHe was promoted to Chief Inspector in 1994, becoming Staff Officer to the Assistant Commissioner. As Personnel  Manager at Walworth Police Station, he set up the first Criminal Justice Unit and formulated a strategy to deal with street robbery (Operation Eagle Eye)i. He received two Assistant Commissioner\u2019s Commendations for this work.\r\nAfter serving  in Bromley,  he returned to Lambeth where he devised the Policing Diversity Strategy and Community\/ Race Relations programme. He was awarded the Police Long Service and Good Conduct Medal,  featured in books highlighting black achievements for the Millennium and was one of the subjects of the \u201cBlack Power\u201d photographic exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery. On  retirement,  he was awarded the Queen\u2019s Police Medal for Distinguished Police Service and later received an Assistant Commissioner\u2019s Commendation for work on Critical Incident Management. Dalton also supports various Barbadian Organisations in London and continues to use the high profile of his career to promote Barbados." This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 693669.</dc:description>
    <dc:contributor>eulac3d</dc:contributor>
    <dc:type xml:lang="en">Person</dc:type>
    <edm:type>TEXT</edm:type>
  </edm:ProvidedCHO>

  <ore:Aggregation rdf:about="EULAC_6698#aggregation">
    <edm:aggregatedCHO rdf:resource="EULAC_6698"/>
    <edm:dataProvider>University of St Andrews</edm:dataProvider>
    <edm:provider>EULAC</edm:provider>
    <edm:isShownBy rdf:resource="https://eu-lac.org/uv/uv.html#?manifest=https://eu-lac.org/galleries/manifest.php/6698"/>
    <edm:rights rdf:resource="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/"/>
    <edm:object rdf:resource=""/>
    <edm:hasView rdf:resource="https://eu-lac.org/uv/uv.html#?manifest=https://eu-lac.org/galleries/manifest3embed.php/6697/6698"/>
  </ore:Aggregation>
  <edm:WebResource rdf:about="https://eu-lac.org/uv/uv.html#?manifest=https://eu-lac.org/galleries/manifest.php/6698">
      <dc:description>"Dalton McConney is a retired Metropolitan Police Chief Inspector. He mostly served as a uniformed officer in South London and came to prominence following the second Brixton riots  In the mid-eighties. He was born in Barbados and educated at Ebenezer Boys and the Modern High School. He worked as a proof reader at the Barbados Advocate newspaper and at the Government Printing Office before joining the economic migration to the UK in I960.\r\nAged 36, he joined the Metropolitan Police in 1976. He served as a Constable at Battersea, Sergeant at Belgravia and a Recruit Instructor at Hendon Police College. He obtained the Certificate of Education (University of London), helped to research the new Police &amp; Criminal Evidence Act 1984, updated the Training Manual and taught the changes in the Act to instructors. He passed the Inspector\u2019s examination in 1988 and was posted to Brixton after the second riots.\r\nHe was the first senior black officer to serve at Brixton Police Station in the Borough of Lambeth. gaining  the trust of residents and helping to lower tensions. He also set up the \u201cBrixton Summer Project\u201d during the school holidays,  engaging local unemployed youth as staff.  A two-part C4 documentary,  \u201cThe Brixton Beat\u201d,  highlighted Dalton\u2019s role in the changes at Brixton. He received a Lambeth Civic Award,  the Mayor\u2019s Special Award and  in 1994 was awarded  the MBE for Police\/Community Service.\r\nHe was promoted to Chief Inspector in 1994, becoming Staff Officer to the Assistant Commissioner. As Personnel  Manager at Walworth Police Station, he set up the first Criminal Justice Unit and formulated a strategy to deal with street robbery (Operation Eagle Eye)i. He received two Assistant Commissioner\u2019s Commendations for this work.\r\nAfter serving  in Bromley,  he returned to Lambeth where he devised the Policing Diversity Strategy and Community\/ Race Relations programme. He was awarded the Police Long Service and Good Conduct Medal,  featured in books highlighting black achievements for the Millennium and was one of the subjects of the \u201cBlack Power\u201d photographic exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery. On  retirement,  he was awarded the Queen\u2019s Police Medal for Distinguished Police Service and later received an Assistant Commissioner\u2019s Commendation for work on Critical Incident Management. Dalton also supports various Barbadian Organisations in London and continues to use the high profile of his career to promote Barbados."</dc:description>
    <dc:format></dc:format>
    <edm:rights rdf:resource="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/"/>
    <dc:type></dc:type>
  </edm:WebResource>
  <edm:WebResource rdf:about="https://eu-lac.org/uv/uv.html#?manifest=https://eu-lac.org/galleries/manifest3embed.php/6697/6698">
      <dc:description>"Dalton McConney is a retired Metropolitan Police Chief Inspector. He mostly served as a uniformed officer in South London and came to prominence following the second Brixton riots  In the mid-eighties. He was born in Barbados and educated at Ebenezer Boys and the Modern High School. He worked as a proof reader at the Barbados Advocate newspaper and at the Government Printing Office before joining the economic migration to the UK in I960.\r\nAged 36, he joined the Metropolitan Police in 1976. He served as a Constable at Battersea, Sergeant at Belgravia and a Recruit Instructor at Hendon Police College. He obtained the Certificate of Education (University of London), helped to research the new Police &amp; Criminal Evidence Act 1984, updated the Training Manual and taught the changes in the Act to instructors. He passed the Inspector\u2019s examination in 1988 and was posted to Brixton after the second riots.\r\nHe was the first senior black officer to serve at Brixton Police Station in the Borough of Lambeth. gaining  the trust of residents and helping to lower tensions. He also set up the \u201cBrixton Summer Project\u201d during the school holidays,  engaging local unemployed youth as staff.  A two-part C4 documentary,  \u201cThe Brixton Beat\u201d,  highlighted Dalton\u2019s role in the changes at Brixton. He received a Lambeth Civic Award,  the Mayor\u2019s Special Award and  in 1994 was awarded  the MBE for Police\/Community Service.\r\nHe was promoted to Chief Inspector in 1994, becoming Staff Officer to the Assistant Commissioner. As Personnel  Manager at Walworth Police Station, he set up the first Criminal Justice Unit and formulated a strategy to deal with street robbery (Operation Eagle Eye)i. He received two Assistant Commissioner\u2019s Commendations for this work.\r\nAfter serving  in Bromley,  he returned to Lambeth where he devised the Policing Diversity Strategy and Community\/ Race Relations programme. He was awarded the Police Long Service and Good Conduct Medal,  featured in books highlighting black achievements for the Millennium and was one of the subjects of the \u201cBlack Power\u201d photographic exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery. On  retirement,  he was awarded the Queen\u2019s Police Medal for Distinguished Police Service and later received an Assistant Commissioner\u2019s Commendation for work on Critical Incident Management. Dalton also supports various Barbadian Organisations in London and continues to use the high profile of his career to promote Barbados"</dc:description>
    <edm:rights rdf:resource=""/>
    <dc:type>Story</dc:type>
  </edm:WebResource>
</rdf:RDF>
 
