黑人警察权力:牙买加警察的政治时刻

IF 1.1 2区 历史学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY Comparative Studies in Society and History Pub Date : 2022-10-28 DOI:10.1017/S0010417522000421
Eilat Maoz
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引用次数: 0

摘要

当代关于警务的争论将“法律与秩序”民粹主义和警察军事化的兴起追溯到殖民历史和帝国的回旋镖效应。然而,在一个以“非殖民化”为新要求的时代,很少有研究调查非殖民化警察在实践中做了什么或可能是什么样子。本文利用牙买加警察的口述历史叙述,重现他们在1970年代改造殖民时期牙买加警察部队的想法。警察非殖民化诞生于黑人权力动员和民主社会主义政府(1972-1980)之下,被视为在经济、文化和政治方面摆脱殖民遗产的更广泛变革努力的一部分。牙买加警察自20世纪初开始激进化,然后开始修改他们的社会使命,并询问警察应该为谁服务和保护谁。最终,由于内部矛盾和外部压力,实验失败,警察民粹主义兴起,对黑人男女的暴力行为增加。这一事件揭示了民粹主义是如何从解放运动的失败中产生的,以及激进的批评是如何变成意识形态上的辩护的。它还强调需要区分今天非殖民化社会和机构的各种、矛盾和重叠的要求。
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Black Police Power: The Political Moment of the Jamaica Constabulary
Abstract Contemporary debates on policing trace the rise of “law and order” populism and police militarization to colonial histories and imperial boomerang effects. In a time marked by the renewed imperative “to decolonize,” however, few studies examine what decolonizing policing did or could look like in practice. This article draws on oral history narratives of Jamaican police officers to recover their ideas about transforming the colonial Jamaica Constabulary Force in the 1970s. Born out of black power mobilizations and under a democratic socialist government (1972–1980), police decolonization was viewed as part of broader transformative effort to rid the country of colonial inheritances in economics, culture, and politics. Jamaican policemen, radicalized since the early twentieth century, then began revising their social mandate and ask who the police should serve and protect. Ultimately, due to internal contradictions and external pressures, the experiment failed, giving rise to police populism and increased violence against black men and women in the ghettos. The episode reveals how populism emerges out of a failure of emancipatory campaigns and how radical critique can turn into ideological justification. It also highlights the need to distinguish between diverse, contradictory, and overlapping demands to decolonize societies and institutions today.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
14.30%
发文量
50
期刊介绍: Comparative Studies in Society and History (CSSH) is an international forum for new research and interpretation concerning problems of recurrent patterning and change in human societies through time and in the contemporary world. CSSH sets up a working alliance among specialists in all branches of the social sciences and humanities as a way of bringing together multidisciplinary research, cultural studies, and theory, especially in anthropology, history, political science, and sociology. Review articles and discussion bring readers in touch with current findings and issues.
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