Resisting racial militarism: War, policing and the Black Panther Party

IF 2.8 1区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Security Dialogue Pub Date : 2021-06-15 DOI:10.1177/0967010621997220
Nivi Manchanda, Chris Rossdale
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

The past ten years have witnessed a revival in scholarship on militarism, through which scholars have used the concept to make sense of the embeddedness of warlike relations in contemporary liberal societies and to account for how the social, political and economic contours of those same societies are implicated in the legitimation and organization of political violence. However, a persistent shortcoming has been the secondary role of race and coloniality in these accounts. This article demonstrates how we might position racism and colonialism as integral to the functioning of contemporary militarism. Centring the thought and praxis of the US Black Panther Party, we argue that the particular analysis developed by Black Panther Party members, alongside their often-tense participation in the anti–Vietnam War movement, offers a strong reading of the racialized and colonial politics of militarism. In particular, we show how their analysis of the ghetto as a colonial space, their understanding of the police as an illegitimate army of occupation and, most importantly, Huey Newton’s concept of intercommunalism prefigure an understanding of militarism premised on the interconnections between racial capitalism, violent practices of un/bordering and the dissolving boundaries between war and police action.
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抵制种族军国主义:战争、警察和黑豹党
过去十年见证了军国主义学术的复兴,学者们通过这一概念来理解当代自由社会中战争关系的嵌入性,并解释这些社会的社会、政治和经济轮廓如何与政治暴力的合法化和组织有关。然而,一个持续的缺点是种族和殖民主义在这些叙述中的次要作用。这篇文章展示了我们如何将种族主义和殖民主义定位为当代军国主义运作的组成部分。以美国黑豹党的思想和实践为中心,我们认为,黑豹党成员进行的特殊分析,以及他们经常紧张地参与反越战运动,有力地解读了军国主义的种族化和殖民政治。特别是,我们展示了他们对贫民区作为殖民空间的分析,他们对警察作为非法占领军的理解,以及最重要的是,休伊·牛顿的社区间主义概念,预示着对军国主义的理解,其前提是种族资本主义、,联合国/边界的暴力行为以及消除战争和警察行动之间的边界。
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来源期刊
Security Dialogue
Security Dialogue INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
6.20%
发文量
19
期刊介绍: Security Dialogue is a fully peer-reviewed and highly ranked international bi-monthly journal that seeks to combine contemporary theoretical analysis with challenges to public policy across a wide ranging field of security studies. Security Dialogue seeks to revisit and recast the concept of security through new approaches and methodologies.
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