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| name = Museum of Slovene Police | | name = Museum of Slovene Police | ||
| localname = Muzej slovenske policije | | localname = Muzej slovenske policije | ||
− | | street address = Policijska akademija, Rocenska ulica 56, SI-1000 Ljubljana | + | | street address = Policijska akademija, Rocenska ulica 56, SI-1000 Ljubljana |
+ | | street = Rocenska ulica 56 | ||
+ | | town = SI-1000 Ljubljana | ||
| telephone = 386 (0) 1 514 7000 | | telephone = 386 (0) 1 514 7000 | ||
| fax = 386 (0) 1 514 7100 | | fax = 386 (0) 1 514 7100 |
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After World War I, documentation on criminal acts on the territory of Slovenia was collected in the old military barracks in Šempeter, Ljubljana. Later the collection was transferred to various locations and since 1970 the so-called Museum of Internal Organisation – Criminal Collection was housed at the Police Secondary School in Tacen, Ljubljana.
In 2001 a Police Academy was established, and as space was initially at a premium the museum was temporarily closed. However, in December 2006, the museum collections were finally allocated a space within the academy and can now be visited by appointment. In this transition period the curator collaborated with the artist Alenka Pirman on the methodological contemporary art exhibition The Case. Art and Criminality at Mala Gallery, Moderna galerija Ljubljana in 2005.
In 2006 the Ministry of the Interior also published a thorough monography The Museum of the Internal Affairs Agencies – A Catalogue and Notes on the History of the Museum, Its Objects and the People Who Created It (in Slovenian).
The collections fulfil an important educational function and raise the awareness on crime prevention; its target audience includes students of criminal and social sciences, law students, doctors, ethnologists, social workers, and defectologists as well as the general public. The collections have been divided into the following sections:
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