The Routledge International Handbook on Decolonizing Justice.
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Superior document: | Routledge International Handbooks Series |
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TeilnehmendeR: | |
Place / Publishing House: | Milton : : Taylor & Francis Group,, 2023. ©2023. |
Year of Publication: | 2023 |
Edition: | 1st ed. |
Language: | English |
Series: | Routledge International Handbooks Series
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Online Access: | |
Physical Description: | 1 online resource (571 pages) |
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Table of Contents:
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- List of illustrations
- Figures
- Tables
- About the editors
- List of contributors
- Preface
- References
- Acknowledgements
- Part I: Why decolonization?: From the personal to the global
- Chapter 1: Between the lines of land and time
- Introduction: to my ancestors
- We are the land: Ⲛⲓⲣⲉⲙⲛⲭⲏⲙⲓ (People of the Black Soil, pronounced NiRemenKeemi) and Palestinian
- A long dirt road begins with the casual barrel of a gun
- Palestine: beloved lands between the river and the sea
- Penal colonialism and Black Feminist Hauntology: echoed formations in call and response
- Wailing for Jerusalem
- ⲉⲣⲫⲉⲓ ⲛⲔⲁⲣⲛⲁⲕ: passage into the lands and times of Ⲛⲓⲣⲉⲙⲛⲭⲏⲙⲓ ancestors
- Long dirt roads hold the answers we seek
- The time is now
- Note
- References
- Chapter 2: Exposing the complexities of the colonial project
- Genocide and colonialism: displacement, dependency, and oppression
- Complicity of criminology with the colonial project
- Neoliberalism, criminalization, and marginalization
- Carceral spaces
- Criminalization of the symptoms of systemic injustice
- Construction and management of risk
- Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 3: "Feeding people's beliefs": Mass media representations of Maˉori and criminality
- Background
- Television and Māori representations
- Reinforcing negative stereotypes
- Societal relations
- Police Ten 7
- Indigenous and Māori representations related to crime
- Discussion
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 4: Girramaa marramarra waluwin: Decolonizing social work
- References
- Chapter 5: The plastic shamans of restorative justice
- Restorative justice and Indigenous peoples: a case study in plastic shamanism
- 'Playing Indigenous': the plastic shamans of restorative justice.
- Mythmaking and plastic shamanism in contemporary restorative justice
- Demythologizing restorative justice
- References
- Chapter 6: Southern disorders: The criminogenesis of neo-imperialism
- Mapping the contours of neo-colonialism for studying harm and violence in the Global South
- Corporate accumulation and the productive capacities of violence in the Global South
- Social disorder, fractured hegemonies, and everyday violence and crime
- Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 7: Place, borders, and the decolonial
- Formal and informal decolonization: the making, breaking and unmaking of colonial borders
- Contesting colonial borders from the outside
- Can colonial borders be unmade? The view from a settler-colonial state
- Conclusion: prospects for decolonizing and precolonizing colonial borders
- Notes
- References
- Part II: State terror and violence
- Chapter 8: Law's violence: The police killing of Kumanjayi Walker and the trial of Zachary Rolfe
- "The legal system is a part of that genocide against our people"
- Law and the undeclared war
- Nomopoly: when 'substantive' law is premised on substantive injustice
- Nomocide: the killing of Kumanjayi Walker and the acquittal of Zachary Rolfe
- Abolition of colonial law as the impossible
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 9: The criminalization and racialization of Palestinian resistance to settler colonialism
- Mass arrests as a colonial tool
- Racializing Palestinian resistance as terrorism and hate/racist crimes
- The securitization of crime and the criminalization of resistance
- Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 10: Criminalizing Gypsies, Roma, and Travellers in the UK
- Gypsies, Roma, and Travellers in the UK
- Law and Policy - Categorizing and Containing Gypsies, Roma, and Travellers
- Policing and Punishment: Gypsies, Roma, and Travellers as Offenders
- Conclusion.
- References
- Chapter 11: Romani people, policing, and penality in Europe
- Justice, Roma, and law enforcement
- Racism and the construction of the 'Gypsy'
- What can be done about it?
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 12: The obsolescence of 'police brutality': Counterinsurgency in a moment of police reform
- 'Police brutality' and the reformist fever dream
- Official ignorance as police power
- The limits/obsolescence of 'police brutality'
- Lessons from the counterinsurgency field manual
- From liberal carceral horizons to civilizational abolition
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 13: Army of the rich
- Relations of production
- Colonialism
- Formal subsumption
- Real subsumption
- The Land Wars
- The army of the rich
- Reform and decolonization
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 14: Algorithms, policing, and race: Insights from decolonial and critical algorithm studies
- Predictive policing algorithms and race neutrality
- The myth of race neutrality
- Decolonial logics and critical algorithm studies
- Exclusionary contexts of algorithmic bias
- Adverse outcomes: the problem of essentialism
- Mitigations and solutions rooted in a confluence of decolonial and critical algorithm studies logics
- Data justice: dismantling data colonialism
- Design justice: amplifying marginal voices for broader representation
- Conclusions
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 15: Decolonizing Policing in the Gulf Cooperation Council
- Policing in the Gulf Cooperation Council
- Racialized Minorities in the Gulf Cooperation Council
- Decolonizing Policing?
- Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 16: Inherited structures and 'indigenized' policing in Africa: Insights from South Africa and Zimbabwe
- Policing in postcolonial Africa
- A history of police-citizen relationships in South Africa and Zimbabwe
- South Africa
- Zimbabwe.
- Contemporary issues in African policing
- South Africa: street committees and community policing forums
- South Africa: the 2012 Marikana Massacre
- Zimbabwe: community relations liaison officers
- Zimbabwe: Operation Murambatsvina
- Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 17: Policing and imperialism in France and the French Empire
- How French policing is enmeshed in imperialism
- An empire unwilling to die
- Internal colonialism
- Neocolonialism in Africa
- Pas de justice, pas de paix!: No justice, no peace
- Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 18: Policing Muslims: Counter-terrorism and Islamophobia in the UK and Australia
- Prevent and the 'ultimate folk devil'
- The Trojan Horse scandal
- Counter-terrorism and Muslims in Australia
- Countering violent extremism in Australia
- Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 19: Decolonizing terrorism: Racist pre-crime, cheap orientalism, and the Taqiya trap
- A decolonial lens
- The Muslims are coming! : Defending the state against the Other
- Cheap orientalism
- Violent Muslims
- Criminalizing anti-colonial critique
- The racist pre-crime
- Institutionalized mistrust: the Taqiya trap
- Concluding remarks: decolonizing terrorism
- Note
- References
- Chapter 20: State Terror, Resistance, and Community Solidarity: Dismantling the Police
- Introduction
- Intersecting Stories of Activism
- Policing Britain's Internal Colonies
- Conclusion
- Note
- References
- Part III: Abolishing the carceral
- Chapter 21: Abolition as a decolonial project
- Tabitha's story
- Debbie's story
- Angela's story
- How our experiences bring us to abolitionism
- Tabitha: what does abolition mean to you as a First Nations woman?
- Angela: can prisons be abolished before addressing the social problems that lead to the mass incarceration of marginalized communities?.
- Debbie: in conclusion, how can white settlers contribute to decolonization?
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 22: Colonial carceral feminism
- Carceral feminism
- Colonial carceralism
- Colonial carceral feminism
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 23: Both sorry and happy: Inquests into Indigenous deaths in custody
- Desecration
- Defiled graves in the courtroom
- The trouble with improvement
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 24: The quotidian violence of incarcerating Indigenous people in the Canadian state: Why reform is not an option for decolonization
- Carceral violence and ongoing penal reforms
- Compounding colonial violence in federal corrections
- Security classifications and risk assessments
- Designations and placements
- Conditions of confinement
- Prison release and returns
- Carceral continuum
- The quotidian violence of colonialism
- Disappearing colonial violence through penal reforms
- Conclusion: decarceration as a decolonization strategy
- Notes
- References
- Cases cited
- Legislation cited
- Chapter 25: Disability, race, and the carceral state: Toward an inclusive decolonial abolition
- Disabling coloniality: interconnecting race and disability
- Contesting coloniality: learning from Indigenous traditions
- Conclusion: toward an inclusive decolonial abolition
- References
- Chapter 26: 'Risk' and the challenges in moving beyond marginalizing frameworks
- Theorizing risk
- Risk and marginalization: reinforcing the 'risky subject'
- Youth, vulnerability, and risk
- Decolonizing risk
- Note
- References
- Chapter 27: The school-to-prison pipeline
- School-to-prison pipeline defined
- The context of criminalized education
- Zero tolerance and police in schools
- Class, race, gender, and ability: disproportionality in school discipline and arrests
- Remedies and policy debates.
- The limits of reform.