RT Article T1 ‘Ulster’s policing goes global’: the police reform process in Northern Ireland and the creation of a global brand JF Crime, law and social change VO 50 IS 4/5 SP 331 OP 351 A1 Ellison, Graham A2 O'Reilly, Conor LA English YR 2008 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1881675874 AB This paper engages with contemporary discussions in relation to the commodification of policing and security. It suggests that the existing literature regarding these trends has been geared primarily towards commercial security providers and has failed to address the processes by which public policing models are commodified and marketed both within, and through, the transnational policing community. Drawing upon evidence from the police change process in Northern Ireland, we argue that a Northern Irish Policing Model (NIPM) has emerged in the aftermath of the Independent Commission on Policing (ICP) reforms. This is increasingly branded and promoted on the global stage. Furthermore, we suggest that the NIPM is not monolithic, but segmented, and targeted towards a number of different ‘consumers’ both domestically and transnationally. Reflecting these diverse markets, the NIPM draws upon two seemingly incongruous constituent elements: the ‘best practice’ lessons of policing transition, as embodied in the ICP reforms; and, the legacy of counter-terrorism expertise drawn from the preceding decades of conflict. The discussion concludes by querying as to which of these components of the NIPM is in the ascendancy. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 349-351 K1 International Stage K1 Police Federation K1 Police Officer K1 Policy Entrepreneur K1 Transitional Justice DO 10.1007/s10611-008-9126-4