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A blog about police, policing and security from an anthropological perspective. We get our name from the Ancient Greek words anthropos (human) and politeia (the business of running the polis, The City or politics; from which we get the word “police”).
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- The hukou and traditional virtue: An ethnographic note on Taiwanese policingTheoretical Criminology, Vol. 17, No. 2. (1 May 2013), pp. 261-269, doi:10.1177/1362480612472785This research note suggests that traditional ideals of virtue in Taiwan enable an order-making dynamic to operate in the backstage of state record-keeping processes. These virtues coordinate cooperation by policemen, civilians and politically empowered elites, sim […]Jeffrey Martin
- Legitimate Force in a Particularistic Democracy: Street Police and Outlaw Legislators in the Republic of China on TaiwanLaw Soc Inq (1 March 2013), pp. n/a-n/a, doi:10.1111/j.1747-4469.2013.01326.xThis article explores a “particularistic” concept of legitimacy important to Taiwanese democracy. This form of legitimacy, I suggest, has been instrumental for Taiwan's successful democratic consolidation in the absence of the rule of law. As evidence, I combine ethnographic ob […]Jeffrey Martin
- From General to Commissioner to General—On the Popular State of Policing in South AfricaLaw Soc Inq (1 June 2013), pp. n/a-n/a, doi:10.1111/lsi.12023Less than two decades after the end of apartheid, South Africa is witnessing a range of policy interventions that almost iconoclastically challenge the premises of democratic governance. Police military ranks have been reintroduced and an exemplary postapartheid law governing the use of lethal forc […]Julia Hornberger
- Performances of Police Legitimacy in Rio's Hyper FavelaLaw Soc Inq (1 June 2013), pp. n/a-n/a, doi:10.1111/lsi.12024Rio de Janeiro is home to over one-thousand favelas (slums), the majority of which are controlled by armed drug traffickers engaged in a long-standing war with police. This article shows how state legitimacy is challenged by the everyday reality of dual power, postcolonial legacies of inequality an […]Erika Larkins
- In Search of Moral Recognition? Policing and Eudaemonic Legitimacy in GhanaLaw Soc Inq (1 June 2013), pp. n/a-n/a, doi:10.1111/lsi.12025Ghana is widely considered as “a beacon of hope for democracy in Africa” (Gyimah-Boadi 2010, 137). Yet substantive democratic transformations of policing have stagnated mainly because the police continue to act as a handmaiden of the state and powerful elites. Consequently, the reliance on performa […]Justice Tankebe
- Cultures of Legitimacy and Postcolonial Policing: Guest Editor IntroductionLaw Soc Inq (1 June 2013), pp. n/a-n/a, doi:10.1111/lsi.12026Beatrice JaureguiBeatrice Jauregui
- Bureaucratic aesthetics: Report writing in the Nigérien gendarmerieAmerican Ethnologist, Vol. 40, No. 2. (1 May 2013), pp. 324-334, doi:10.1111/amet.12024Nigérien gendarmes invest considerable creative energy in their daily paperwork. I explore how the gendarmes conceive of the writing of seemingly purely bureaucratic documents, procès-verbaux, in aesthetic terms. At the same time, I ground the aesthetic appreciation of the […]Mirco Göpfert
- "I Got Here from There": Practicing Anthropology While PolicingPracticing Anthropology, Vol. 34, No. 2. (1 April 2012), pp. 9-12A few years into my policing career in the early 1980s, I decided to pursue a university degree on a part-time basis while working full-time as a police officer. I had no idea what exactly I wanted to study. By this time, however, I was well aware of the duties required of a front-line police r […]Cathy Prowse
- The Emotionality of Participation: Various Modes of Participation in Ethnographic Fieldwork on Private Policing in Durban, South AfricaJournal of Contemporary Ethnography, Vol. 42, No. 2. (1 April 2013), pp. 201-225, doi:10.1177/0891241612452140This article explores methodological issues as a prominent subject in ethnographic fieldwork conducted on a specific group of private security officers, namely, armed response officers, in Durban, South Africa. Through analyzing several experiences f […]Tessa Diphoorn
- Political geographies of the objectPolitical Geography, Vol. 33 (March 2013), pp. 1-10, doi:10.1016/j.polgeo.2012.11.002This paper examines the role of objects in the constitution and exercise of state power, drawing on a close reading of the acclaimed HBO television series The Wire, an unconventional crime drama set and shot in Baltimore, Maryland. While political geography increasingly reco […]Sallie Marston


Some thoughts on the London “riots”: Foucault’s genealogy of neoliberalism and “police as a public service”
August 12, 2011 by kevinkarpiak 4 Comments
I have to say I resisted writing this post. I have a visceral distaste for academic discursive hermeneutics performed from afar–this is partly why I’m an ethnographer, after all– and, that’s even more the case when trying to write au courant journalistically
However, despite having absolutely no ethnographic expertise among British police and only a concerned collaborator’s familiarity with the issues on the ground there, I’m going to just get over it–tempered still, hopefully, by a degree of humility and a recognition of our responsibility to ignorance. The reason I’ve made this decision is to emphasize an ethnographic fact that I think is important for this blog: so much of what makes police a salient issue in broader terms are in fact riots and, conversely, so many riots, uprisings and rebellions are in fact about police.
All that was a way of putting a large preliminary asterisk on certain observations I’ve made following the news coverage via my own personal extended network of interwebs (BBC, CNN, NPR, Jeff Martin’s twitter feed…). I’ve noticed a narrative dynamic emerging that I find a bit frustrating: on the one hand, news coverage presents the familiar “these are criminals/hoodlums without a politics,” with all its logical absurdities (is criminality innate and apolitical? If so, if these are innate tendencies and not the result of social conditions, how has London and then other cities in the UK suddenly–within the last several days– sprouted so many of this type? What would be the litmus test for whether determining this is a political act, by the way?).
On the other hand, often in an effort to show “the other side” or to emphasize some diversity of opinion on the events, news coverage includes another narrative which risks being equally tired and absurd, the “this is an expression of political-economic disenfranchisement” argument (with it’s equally non-falsifiable claims–what, again, are the criteria for deciding that this is political, and when where these events put to that criteria? what factors and/or data were considered? what would apolitical events look like? If at least one of these criteria should be statements of such from the protesters themselves, it does not seem to meet the definition…)
Even within stories framed in such a manner, however, I’ve noticed an interesting set of dissonances; some contradictions that, if properly attended to, don’t quite fit the dominant framing:
I think a less contradictory framing is possible if we make use of Foucault’s geneaology of liberalism (which I’ve written a bit on before), itself formulated during a crisis-point in global capitalism, which identifies neoliberal efforts to “reduce government” as one strategy, within a longer history of liberal political thought, which attempts to find external principles of limitation on government. Part of why Foucault spends so much time on this is that it offers a prescient insight into so much of the nature of policing, security & surveillance today: namely that it springs from the same concern and theory of government. Although often misread, I think, Foucault’s point is that the policing techniques of surveillance (much used in Britain) which skeev many of us out are not efforts to achieve a tightly controlled police state, but the opposite: it’s a strategy of governance which, for many reasons, sees such totalitarian aspirations as ineffectual and unnatural. In this sense, security strategies of surveillance are attempts to provide a “policed” state (in the older sense of “happy, well -ordered and thriving”) with minimal police (in the sense of a specialized political organ claiming the monopoly of legitimate violence) interventon; police without policing.
In this sense, the policing strategies so heavily relied upon by Britain over the last several years are both part and parcel of a political rationality that also focused on finding more “economical” forms of government. The same rationality which leads to a dis-investiture of the social programs targeted by “austerity measures.” The two sides of the framing in the popular news-framing, then, are certainly not contradictory, nor is the one an effect of the other: they are two sides of the very same political rationality; one that more and more seems diseased. What will be the alternative? I’m not sure, but finding a useful answer, I think, depends on understanding the political logic in which we find ourselves.
Filed under Commentary, In the News Tagged with BBC, CNN, Darcus Howe, governmentality, liberalism, London, Michel Foucault, neoliberalism, NPR, policing, Policing the Crisis, Reuters, riots, security, Security Territory Population, Stuart Hall, surveillance, Tottenham, United Kingdom