Suchergebnisse
Filter
16 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
Reflecting on the Power of hooks - Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center. By bell hooks. New York: Routledge, [1984] 2015. 180 pp. $136.00 (hardcover), $23.96 (paperback)
In: Politics & gender, Band 15, Heft 4
ISSN: 1743-9248
Racial Violence and the Post-Emancipation Struggle for Intimate Equality
In: Intimate Justice, S. 69-112
Intimate Injustice, Political Obligation, and the Dark Ghetto
In: Intimate Justice, S. 113-132
Intimate Injustice, Political Obligation, and the Dark Ghetto
In: Signs: journal of women in culture and society, Band 39, Heft 3, S. 735-760
ISSN: 1545-6943
Walking with Strangers
In: Western Political Science Association 2011 Annual Meeting Paper
SSRN
Working paper
Can All Strangers Talk to Us?: Citizenship on a Stroll
In: Western Political Science Association 2011 Annual Meeting Paper
SSRN
Working paper
Black Women's Hair and Questions of Freedom
SSRN
Working paper
DYING FAST AND DYING SLOW IN BLACK SPACE: Stop and Frisk's Public Health Threat and a Comprehensive Necropolitics
In: Du bois review: social science research on race, Band 14, Heft 2, S. 535-556
ISSN: 1742-0598
AbstractAggressive policing strategies have come under scrutiny for stark racial and ethnic inequities. New York City, home to the United States' largest police force, was subject to a federal class action lawsuit that culminated in its "Stop, Question and Frisk" policies being ruled unconstitutional. In this paper we argue that Stop and Frisk not only violates constitutional rights, but also constitutes a public health problem. Operating as one process in the death world, Stop and Frisk transforms urban space from a resource to a source of danger; induces perceptual dysfunctions that stymie possibilities for Black engagement with the state and make blackness a metonym for crime and disorder; depletes economic and civic resources; and is embodied, by imprinting on the Black body, physically and mentally. Taken together this policing practice induces stress, fear and trauma, marks the Black body as the proper target for erasure by those who would restore the moral order of the polity, and sets Black lives on a trajectory of debility. Stop and Frisk, whatever its intent, is a necropolitical project. Though Achille Mbembe defined necropolitics as the sovereign determination of who lives and dies, we argue that necropolitical projects need not produce a dead body immediately to function. We extend Mbembe's concept to include diffuse, environmental factors that scale up from individual encounters to Black communities. Though Foucault's widely cited analysis sees the prison as central in the management and regulation of populations, we hold that Stop and Frisk has more in common with necropower than with biopower, producing dysfunctional bodies awaiting death.
The Demand of Justice: Symposium on Tommie Shelby's Dark Ghettos: Injustice, Dissent, and Reform, Harvard University Press, 2016
In: Political theory: an international journal of political philosophy, Band 47, Heft 4, S. 527-558
ISSN: 1552-7476
Bodies in Politics
In: Contemporary political theory: CPT, Band 15, Heft 1, S. 80-118
ISSN: 1476-9336
The "Agonistic Turn": Political Theory and the Displacement of Politics in New Contexts
In: Contemporary political theory: CPT, Band 18, Heft 4, S. 640-672
ISSN: 1476-9336