Policing the Poor in Eighteenth-Century London: The Vagrancy
Laws and Their Administration
Authors
Nicholas Rogers
Abstract
The treatment of vagrancy in eighteenth-century England has conventionally been
seen as amateurish, arbitrary and corrupt. This paper argues that, even in London,
vagrancy was shaped by local discretionary code that recognized the diversity and
complexity of vagrancy and the requirements of a capitalist economy for male, mobile
labour. It was only as the metropolitan labour market contracted that the defects of the
vagrancy laws became apparent. In this context, local administrative policies gave way to
broader, interventionist strategies as new kinds of "moral entrepreneurs" persuaded
ratepayers that more expensive, carceral alternatives were necessary to police London's
wandering poor.