This article explores the role of ‘colonial common sense’ (Stoler, 2008) in racialising men of colour in capital cases in twentieth-century England and Wales. Following the First World War psychiatric and psychological discourses became more prominent in both the criminal justice system and the wider culture, but were not the primary means through which race was constructed in capital trials. Rather, colonially informed common sense understandings of racial difference were more significant and were themselves an aspect of medical expertise, such as prison medicine. The article discusses cases such as Djang Djin Sung, the first man of colour to be executed in England after the First World War, Lock Ah Tam, who was hanged in 1926 despite bene...
This article examines ninety-three deaths with a known or suspected racial element in the UK that to...
In the United Kingdom (UK), race scholars continue to reinvigorate (Phillips et al., 2019; Nijjar, 2...
This article analyses how the criminalisation and imprisonment of Aboriginal people operated as too...
This article explores the role of ‘colonial common sense’ (Stoler, 2008) in racialising men of colou...
This article examines 10 capital cases of men of colour sentenced to death in England and Wales for ...
This poster will outline a new Leverhulme funded project, Race, Racialisation and the Death Penalty,...
'Race, Racialisation and the Death Penalty in England and Wales, 1900-65͛ is an interdi...
This article is a microhistory of the capital case of Percy Clifford, a man of colour who was hanged...
This article examines 10 capital cases of men of colour sentenced to death in England and Wales for ...
Joint enterprise (JE) is an extraordinary legal device deployed to punish and (re)produce those who ...
As part of a wider project exploring all cases of black and minority ethnic people se...
‘Joint enterprise’ is described as a ‘dragnet’ that draws disproportionate numbers of black and mino...
The disproportionate rate of adverse police-black encounters, instances of unfair and unequal treatm...
This article explores the racial dimensions of the various collateral consequences that attach to cr...
In the United Kingdom (UK), race scholars continue to reinvigorate (Phillips et al., 2019; Nijjar, 2...
This article examines ninety-three deaths with a known or suspected racial element in the UK that to...
In the United Kingdom (UK), race scholars continue to reinvigorate (Phillips et al., 2019; Nijjar, 2...
This article analyses how the criminalisation and imprisonment of Aboriginal people operated as too...
This article explores the role of ‘colonial common sense’ (Stoler, 2008) in racialising men of colou...
This article examines 10 capital cases of men of colour sentenced to death in England and Wales for ...
This poster will outline a new Leverhulme funded project, Race, Racialisation and the Death Penalty,...
'Race, Racialisation and the Death Penalty in England and Wales, 1900-65͛ is an interdi...
This article is a microhistory of the capital case of Percy Clifford, a man of colour who was hanged...
This article examines 10 capital cases of men of colour sentenced to death in England and Wales for ...
Joint enterprise (JE) is an extraordinary legal device deployed to punish and (re)produce those who ...
As part of a wider project exploring all cases of black and minority ethnic people se...
‘Joint enterprise’ is described as a ‘dragnet’ that draws disproportionate numbers of black and mino...
The disproportionate rate of adverse police-black encounters, instances of unfair and unequal treatm...
This article explores the racial dimensions of the various collateral consequences that attach to cr...
In the United Kingdom (UK), race scholars continue to reinvigorate (Phillips et al., 2019; Nijjar, 2...
This article examines ninety-three deaths with a known or suspected racial element in the UK that to...
In the United Kingdom (UK), race scholars continue to reinvigorate (Phillips et al., 2019; Nijjar, 2...
This article analyses how the criminalisation and imprisonment of Aboriginal people operated as too...