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Enforcing Order: An Ethnography of Urban Policing

ISBN: 978-0-745-67094-2

September 2013

Polity

320 pages

Description
Most incidents of urban unrest in recent decades - including the riots in France, Britain and other Western countries - have followed lethal interactions between the youth and the police. Usually these take place in disadvantaged neighborhoods composed of working-class families of immigrant origin or belonging to ethnic minorities. These tragic events have received a great deal of media coverage, but we know very little about the everyday activities of urban policing that lie behind them.

Over the course of 15 months, at the time of the 2005 riots, Didier Fassin carried out an ethnographic study in one of the largest precincts in the Paris region, sharing the life of a police station and cruising with the patrols, in particular the dreaded anti-crime squads. Far from the imaginary worlds created by television series and action movies, he uncovers the ordinary aspects of law enforcement, characterized by inactivity and boredom, by eventless days and nights where minor infractions give rise to spectacular displays of force and where officers express doubts about the significance and value of their own jobs. Describing the invisible manifestations of violence and unrecognized forms of discrimination against minority youngsters, undocumented immigrants and Roma people, he analyses the conditions that make them possible and tolerable, including entrenched policies of segregation and stigmatization, economic marginalization and racial discrimination.

Richly documented and compellingly told, this unique account of contemporary urban policing shows that, instead of enforcing the law, the police are engaged in the task of enforcing an unequal social order in the name of public security.

About the Author
Didier Fassin is James D. Wolfensohn Professor at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton. His previous works include The Empire of Trauma and When Bodies Remember.
Features
  • Didier Fassin is a highly regarded anthropologist and sociologist at Princeton who has published several well-known books on humanitarian action in Africa.
  • This book offers an insider’s view of a modern police force - how it works day-to-day and how it responds to urban unrest and disorder.
  • The issues that Fassin examines here - urban disorder and rioting - are relevant to all Western societies, including the US and the UK.
  • This book will be of particular interest to students and scholars in sociology, anthropology and criminology. Given the topicality of the issues, it should also get wide review coverage.