书评:Lisa Sugiura,《乱伦叛乱:庄园的兴起与对女性的虚拟战争》

IF 1.7 3区 社会学 Q2 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY Crime Media Culture Pub Date : 2022-05-17 DOI:10.1177/17416590221099078
A. Lindsay
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In rallies, attendees provided hand sanitizer, masks, food and water, and physical protection, creating safety and support without—and against—the police. In concluding, the authors recommend maintaining safety without police; promoting organizations against state and police violence; and conducting “research on not for the police” (p. 111). Policing the Pandemic is succinct, accessible, and informative for students and professionals alike. It is, of course, a timely piece, as just over 6 million people have died from COVID-19 at the time of this writing. Analyzing the police’s role in exacerbating the crisis by treating “the public as the virus” is critical (p.1). Even as COVID-19 rates begin to decline and restrictions lift, the pandemic reveals the vast scope of police power. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

在黑人女性(包括Sojourner Truth、Harriet Tubman、Ida B.Wells、Angela Davis、Ruth Wilson Gilmore和Mariame Kaba)的领导下,废奴主义挑战了各种相互关联的压迫制度,从动产奴隶制到现代监狱工业综合体(PIC)(第91页)。废奴主义者没有提倡“最佳实践”和“更公平的结果”来改善治安,而是寻求完全取消治安的资金、解除武装、解散和权力(第84页)。取而代之的是,废奴主义者提倡“护理、福利和社区支持的基础设施”(第93页)。废奴主义的做法虽然经常被视为“天真、乌托邦、幻想、理想主义和不切实际”(第79页),但仍然突出。在2020年黑人生命攸关(BLM)起义期间,抗议者将结构性种族主义与警察、住房和医疗保健联系起来。在集会中,与会者提供了洗手液、口罩、食物和水,以及人身保护,在没有警察和反对警察的情况下创造了安全和支持。最后,提交人建议在没有警察的情况下维持安全;促进反对国家和警察暴力的组织;以及进行“关于不为警察服务的研究”(第111页)。对学生和专业人士来说,疫情管理简洁、易懂、信息丰富。当然,这是一篇及时的文章,因为在撰写本文时,已有600多万人死于新冠肺炎。通过将“公众视为病毒”来分析警察在加剧危机中的作用至关重要(第1页)。尽管新冠肺炎发病率开始下降,限制措施解除,但这场大流行揭示了警察权力的巨大范围。为此,我希望看到更多地参与警方用于执行新冠肺炎协议的做法和技术,包括开发豁免护照、使用空中无人机执行封锁,或者表面上是为了保护警察免受咳嗽和吐口水攻击,但也被用作一种约束方法。然而,对治安、公共秩序和公共卫生进行更广泛的历史分析是非常宝贵的;事实上,它允许在警察权力和各种公共卫生危机之间建立联系。我想起了携带纳洛酮(Narcan)用于阿片类药物过量逆转的警察,或者旨在协助警察进行危机干预的社会工作者。在这方面,《大流行病的警务》是想象一个废奴主义者的现在和未来的关键,它促进了从警务的安全和秩序中解脱出来的护理、社区和安全。
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Book review: Lisa Sugiura, The Incel Rebellion: The Rise of the Manosphere and the Virtual War Against Women
and led by Black women (including Sojourner Truth, Harriet Tubman, Ida B. Wells, Angela Davis, Ruth Wilson Gilmore, and Mariame Kaba), abolitionism challenges a variety of interlocking oppressive institutions, from chattel slavery to the modern Prison Industrial Complex (PIC) (p. 91). Rather than advocate for “best practice” and “fairer outcomes” to improve policing, abolitionists seek to defund, disarm, disband, and disempower policing altogether (p. 84). In its place, abolitionists promote an “infrastructure of care, welfare and community support” (p. 93). While often viewed as “naive, utopian, fanciful, idealistic and unrealistic” (p. 79), abolitionist practices remain prominent. During the Black Lives Matter (BLM) uprisings of 2020, protesters drew connections between structural racism and police, housing, and healthcare. In rallies, attendees provided hand sanitizer, masks, food and water, and physical protection, creating safety and support without—and against—the police. In concluding, the authors recommend maintaining safety without police; promoting organizations against state and police violence; and conducting “research on not for the police” (p. 111). Policing the Pandemic is succinct, accessible, and informative for students and professionals alike. It is, of course, a timely piece, as just over 6 million people have died from COVID-19 at the time of this writing. Analyzing the police’s role in exacerbating the crisis by treating “the public as the virus” is critical (p.1). Even as COVID-19 rates begin to decline and restrictions lift, the pandemic reveals the vast scope of police power. To that, I would have liked to see a bit more engagement with police practices and technologies used to enforce COVID-19 protocols, including the development of immunity passports, implementation of aerial drones to enforce lockdowns, or spit hoods ostensibly meant to protect police from cough and spit attacks but have also been used as a restraint method. Nevertheless, the broader historical analysis of policing, public order, and public health is invaluable; indeed, it allows for connections to be made between police power and a variety of public health crises. I am reminded of police carrying naloxone (Narcan) for opioid overdose reversal or social workers meant to assist police for crisis intervention. In this, Policing the Pandemic is key for imagining an abolitionist present and future that promotes care, community, and safety disentangled from policing’s security and order.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
11.10%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: Crime, Media, Culture is a fully peer reviewed, international journal providing the primary vehicle for exchange between scholars who are working at the intersections of criminological and cultural inquiry. It promotes a broad cross-disciplinary understanding of the relationship between crime, criminal justice, media and culture. The journal invites papers in three broad substantive areas: * The relationship between crime, criminal justice and media forms * The relationship between criminal justice and cultural dynamics * The intersections of crime, criminal justice, media forms and cultural dynamics
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