Policing in Divided Societies: Theorising a Type of Policing
In: Policing & society: an international journal of research & policy, Band 1, Heft 3, S. 179-191
ISSN: 1043-9463
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In: Policing & society: an international journal of research & policy, Band 1, Heft 3, S. 179-191
ISSN: 1043-9463
In: Policing: a journal of policy and practice, Band 1, Heft 4, S. 428-437
ISSN: 1752-4520
In: Policing and society: an international journal of research and policy, Band 1, Heft 3, S. 179-191
ISSN: 1477-2728
In: Policing and society: an international journal of research and policy, Band 24, Heft 5, S. 602-619
ISSN: 1477-2728
In: Policing and society: an international journal of research and policy, Band 16, Heft 2, S. 127-145
ISSN: 1477-2728
In: Public culture, Band 31, Heft 3, S. 469-496
ISSN: 1527-8018
How do everyday acts of policing hinge upon the contrastive evaluation of sensible intensities? This article examines how various attunements toward regimes of sensible intensities shape the policing of borders and bodies in a place where questions of the "sovereign" and identifications of the "illegal" are semiotically and politically up for grabs: the Indonesia-Malaysia borderlands. In two expository sketches, it examines the various ways in which the Indonesia-Malaysia border is policed as a virtual threshold between people and places considered to be "more-or-less the same."
This book of original essays presents controversial topics, then encourages the readers to consider what they think ought to be done. The selections identify several of the existing issues in policing about which something needs to be done; then, they present various viewpoints on possible solutions. This is done against the backdrop of an era of significant change in worldwide security, post-9/11, that has caused major changes in the manner in which the U.S. conducts its political, social and economic affairs
In: Criminal Justice: Recent Scholarship
Community policing is in decline, threatened with obsolescence by data-driven practices like COMPSTAT and Intelligence-Led Policing. Efficiency driven and aided by technology, these practices are delivering on the crime reduction promises community policing aspired to. Ray argues that much of community policing's difficulties lie in the lack of a clear theoretical foundation informing its community engagement mandate. The uncritical incorporation of pluralism needlessly highlights the differences between police and community groups. Deliberative democratic theory offers a theoretical foundatio
In: Urbane Sicherheit und Partizipation, S. 95-134
In: Sound Matters
Fans and detractors of popular music tend to agree on one thing: popular music is a bellwether of an individual's political and cultural values. In the United States, for example, one cannot think of the counterculture apart from its music. For that reason, in virtually every country in the world, some group identifies popular music as a source of potential danger and wants to regulate it. Policing Pop looks into the many ways in which popular music and artists around the world are subjected to censorship, ranging from state control and repression to the efforts of special interest or religiou
In: Comparative studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, Band 39, Heft 3, S. 425-438
ISSN: 1548-226X
AbstractStudies on militarization and borders in South Asia often focus on zones of spectacular conflict, such as Kashmir, or partition violence in Punjab. This article examines the production of everyday policing in a zone of high surveillance that is not a conventional military "hot spot" in the region. The question of who or what constitutes the police force is as important as the question of what it does. The categories of police or law enforcer and those who are policed are malleable and contingent. Networks of secrecy, transparency, and trust are produced through a series of dialogic relationships between police, borderland residents, and other actors not conventionally taken to be a part of the security apparatus—for example, tourists, development agencies, and anthropologists. The article suggests that encounters between those on either side of the law are not only coercive, but shot through with shades of hospitality, reciprocity, and desire. It thus attempts to refigure wartime and peacetime as periods of continuum rather than opposition and repositions those who are inside and outside formal categories of law enforcement to suggest that the manner in which the border is policed may reflect the ways in which borderland populations are engaged quite actively with the question of security.
In: Policing and society: an international journal of research and policy, Band 34, Heft 1-2, S. 87-103
ISSN: 1477-2728
In: Routledge Solon explorations in crime and criminal justice histories
In: Routledge Solon explorations in crime and criminal justice histories
In: Policing: an International Journal Ser. v.1
Covers -- Editorial advisory board -- The benefit of intelligence officers -- Can threat assessment help police prevent mass public shootings? Testing an intelligence-led policing tool -- Offender interviews: implications for intelligence-led policing -- Community policing and intelligence-led policing -- Harm-focused offender triage and prioritization: a Philadelphia case study -- Hoteliers as crime control partners -- Suspicious preoperational activities and law enforcement interdiction of terrorist plots -- Conservation-based intelligence-led policing.