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policing
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2019) 31 (3): 419–445.
Published: 01 September 2019
...Caren Kaplan; Andrea Miller; Shamus Khan; Madiha Tahir The use of drones to supplement and operationalize US border enforcement and municipal policing disturbs the supposed boundary between military and civilian or battleground and home front. Situating drones in an expanded field of a war power...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2019) 31 (3): 469–496.
Published: 01 September 2019
...Andrew M. Carruthers; Shamus Khan; Madiha Tahir 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...
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2019) 31 (3): 447–468.
Published: 01 September 2019
...Rivke Jaffe; Shamus Khan; Madiha Tahir This article develops a theorization of “speculative policing”: an experimental, future-oriented form of policing that connects crime prevention to real-estate speculation and other forms of negotiating urban risk and uncertainty. Speculative policing works...
FIGURES
Image
Published: 01 September 2019
Figure 4 Policing virtual thresholds. Map provided by ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute.
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2019) 31 (3): 409–418.
Published: 01 September 2019
...Madiha Tahir; Shamus Khan; Madiha Tahir As violence work, policing exceeds the institution of the police. Indeed, the latest bout of American invasions that cluster under the label “global war on terror” have been framed as policing operations by American officials as well as scholars. What...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2019) 31 (3): 539–561.
Published: 01 September 2019
...Didier Fassin; Shamus Khan; Madiha Tahir Against the normative definition of punishment as the infliction of pain on an offender by an appropriate legal authority, this essay argues that the police, although they are not entitled to administer retribution, commonly do so on the street...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2019) 31 (3): 601–623.
Published: 01 September 2019
...Stuart Schrader; Shamus Khan; Madiha Tahir The police in the United States were once subject to control by political machines. The professionalization process freed police from this control, but it had an unexpected result. Professionalization meant that police answered primarily to themselves...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2022) 34 (1 (96)): 9–19.
Published: 01 January 2022
... centralized fronts of law and procedure in their wake. The political frontier is exemplified by the current fusion of warfare and lawfare — the extrajudicial violence of racialized and militarized policing, the right to look and inspect and the murder and carceralization of minorities, migrants, and cognate...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2016) 28 (1 (78)): 3–8.
Published: 01 January 2016
...John L. Jackson, Jr The piece discusses race and criminal justice in the context of recent videotaped cases of young black men dying at the hands of police officers. 2016 criminal justice new media policing race visual studies “The revolution will not be televised.” Poet Gil Scott...
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Published: 01 May 2022
figure 2. Geolocated map of distribution of internal checkpoint assessments by police in the city of Urumchi, 2017–2019. Approximately 80 percent of assessments targeted Muslims. Image provided by the Intercept with permission.
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in Property, Dispossession, and Citizenship in Turkey; Or, the History of the Gezi Uprising Starts in the Surp Hagop Armenian Cemetery
> Public Culture
Published: 01 September 2016
Figure 2 Police teargas as an everyday protest practice. Photograph by Ufuk Koşar
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Image
Published: 01 May 2022
figure 1. An Uyghur woman stares into a police officer's camera while stopped at a checkpoint in Urumchi in 2017. To protect her identity, the woman's name and ID number has been obscured in this police file photo. Courtesy of Yael Grauer.
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Image
Published: 01 May 2018
Figure 2 Police guarding bulldozers during demolition of a Bedouin house, August 4, 2015 (Michal Rotem/Negev Co-Existence Forum for Civil Equality)
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2019) 31 (3): 645–663.
Published: 01 September 2019
...Samira Bueno; Graham Denyer Willis; Shamus Khan; Madiha Tahir Between 2013 and 2016, police in one Brazilian city killed 3,287 people—66.5 percent of whom were black. It might not seem surprising, then, that this place is also one of the only in the world that has a prison just for police...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2019) 31 (3): 625–644.
Published: 01 September 2019
...Kim Shayo Buchanan; Phillip Atiba Goff; Shamus Khan; Madiha Tahir Law enforcement agencies, community advocates and policymakers hope that the widespread adoption of police bodycams will alleviate racial disparities and reduce misconduct and use of force. Racial justice has been central...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2019) 31 (3): 521–538.
Published: 01 September 2019
... of the law and, ultimately, an abolitionist. By reading “The Fire Next Time” (1963) and “No Name in the Street” (1972), I argue that policing in the United States is inherently organized by a(n) (il)logic of anti-Blackness that necessitates racist violence as a structural component of its practice...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2022) 34 (2 (97)): 219–237.
Published: 01 May 2022
... examples of an increasingly visible phenomenon: disclosures about large, closely guarded design, manufacturing, and administrative efforts before their official unveiling. Rather than simply policing the boundary between the secret and the public, in “big” design, in collective efforts to produce knowledge...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2021) 33 (3 (95)): 289–303.
Published: 01 September 2021
... damaged the lungs of many, many more). George Floyd and Daniel Prude, unarmed and Black, were suffocated by the police in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and Rochester, New York, respectively. Protesters marching in the streets for racial justice were tear‐gassed under milky skies. Wildfires raged up and down...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2022) 34 (2 (97)): 167–193.
Published: 01 May 2022
...figure 2. Geolocated map of distribution of internal checkpoint assessments by police in the city of Urumchi, 2017–2019. Approximately 80 percent of assessments targeted Muslims. Image provided by the Intercept with permission. ...
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2017) 29 (2 (82)): 385–414.
Published: 01 May 2017
... is shrinking and control over its use has tightened considerably through zero-tolerance policing, growing surveillance, privatization, and gentrification. It argues that significant developments in digital media (e.g., the spread of mobile devices, photo sharing, blogging, and social networking sites) have...
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