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The Hispanic Outreach: Network Analysis of a Community-Based Policing Program in South Los Angeles
In: Critical sociology, Band 50, Heft 3, S. 517-538
ISSN: 1569-1632
This article examines the nature, movement, and controversies of the information flowing through a Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) community-based program in a predominantly Latino migrant neighborhood of South Los Angeles known as 'the Hispanic Outreach' (HO). Combining Actor-Network and Critical Race theories enables me to examine the world of police and Latino civilians through the groups, social actions, facts, and objects that compose it, as one single, unified set of interwoven associations and processes. Findings show that the HO claims to serve the public's interests in safety in high crime environments but instead stirs local interracial conflict and Latino residents' fears over questions of citizenship, belonging, and access to resources, and deepens state penetration into communities it deems as racial threats. I show how networks are state tools that reproduce and reinforce racial power and situate these findings within the field of Critical Sociology, particularly the areas of policing and Latino studies. And this article ends with a discussion of several potential research directions.
El público de la prensa en España a finales del siglo XVIII (1781 - 1808)
In: Ciencias sociales 95
Police and State Crime in the Americas: Southern and Postcolonial Perspectives
In: Palgrave's Critical Policing Studies
Imperial Regimes -- Chapter 1: Uruguayan Police in the Age of Conservative Hegemony by Rafael Paternain -- Chapter 2: Securing Citizens, Pacifying Subjects and Criminalizing "Others": The Dark Side of Community Policing in Latin America by Markus-Michael Müller -- Chapter 3: Tribal Law and Order and the Settler-Colonial Logics of Reservation Policing by Theresa Rocha Beardall -- Colonial Organizations -- Chapter 4: Policing Immigrant Communities: An Assessment of State Sanctioned Violence in the Name of Migration Control by Mercedes Valadez and Jennifer Noble -- Chapter 5: Techniques and Technologies: The Military Expansion of São Paulo's Municipal Civil Guard by José Douglas dos Santos Silva -- Chapter 6: Policing in Puerto Rico: Reforms of the Twenty First Century, by Xavier Perez and Jhon Sanabria -- Repressive Encounters -- Chapter 7: Nos Quedamos Marcados: The Carceral Regime's Ripple Effect on Mexican Families by Marlene Mercado -- Chapter 8: How Black Genocide Happens: Military Patronage, Policing, and the Coloniality of Gender in Rio de Janeiro Favelas by Carla dos Santos Mattos -- Chapter 9: The Criminology of State Violence will include interviews with critical theorists, Biko Agozino and Guillermina Seri -- Chapter 10: Counter-Colonial Methods includes interviews with critical methodologists, Robert Duran and Nicolas Barrera -- Chapter 11: Between Accountability and Alternatives is an interview with police reformers, Jhon Sanabria and Bernardo Gill.