In this article, I show how the work of heterogeneous security and policing assemblages in Nairobi hinges upon and reproduces physical urban borders, and consequentially enacts social orders. While these assemblages enrol a diverse collection of people and objects, I liken their work to that of the state: some urban residents are considered as belonging to safe spaces and in need of extra protection, while others are considered dangerous and targets of policing activities. I draw on one year of ethnographic fieldwork with private security companies and police patrols in middle- and upper-class Nairobi. In Nairobi, armed police personnel are commonly seen in vehicles that are marked with the logos and colours of security companies or private...
This article analyses various police reform initiatives in Kenya as a form of ‘moral bordering’. Dra...
This article analyses various police reform initiatives in Kenya as a form of ‘moral bordering’. Dra...
Over the course of the last 20 years, there has been an increase in the number of private security o...
This paper analyses two policing arrangements between the state police and several private security ...
This paper analyses two policing arrangements between the state police and several private security ...
Research on policing in Africa has provided tremendous insight into how non-state actors, such as ga...
Research on policing in Africa has provided tremendous insight into how non-state actors, such as ga...
This dissertation contributes to public and scholarly discourse around urban sociality in Africa. Un...
This dissertation contributes to public and scholarly discourse around urban sociality in Africa. Un...
After the terror attack at Nairobi’s Westgate Mall in September 2013, the Kenyan security sector exp...
This article sets out to explore the ways in which local divisions contribute to and contest “permi...
This paper examines how communities at the urban margins, who are under-protected by the state polic...
This article analyses the informal security market in the Nairobi slums of Kibera and Mathare. It as...
This article analyses the informal security market in the Nairobi slums of Kibera and Mathare. It as...
This article analyses various police reform initiatives in Kenya as a form of ‘moral bordering’. Dra...
This article analyses various police reform initiatives in Kenya as a form of ‘moral bordering’. Dra...
This article analyses various police reform initiatives in Kenya as a form of ‘moral bordering’. Dra...
Over the course of the last 20 years, there has been an increase in the number of private security o...
This paper analyses two policing arrangements between the state police and several private security ...
This paper analyses two policing arrangements between the state police and several private security ...
Research on policing in Africa has provided tremendous insight into how non-state actors, such as ga...
Research on policing in Africa has provided tremendous insight into how non-state actors, such as ga...
This dissertation contributes to public and scholarly discourse around urban sociality in Africa. Un...
This dissertation contributes to public and scholarly discourse around urban sociality in Africa. Un...
After the terror attack at Nairobi’s Westgate Mall in September 2013, the Kenyan security sector exp...
This article sets out to explore the ways in which local divisions contribute to and contest “permi...
This paper examines how communities at the urban margins, who are under-protected by the state polic...
This article analyses the informal security market in the Nairobi slums of Kibera and Mathare. It as...
This article analyses the informal security market in the Nairobi slums of Kibera and Mathare. It as...
This article analyses various police reform initiatives in Kenya as a form of ‘moral bordering’. Dra...
This article analyses various police reform initiatives in Kenya as a form of ‘moral bordering’. Dra...
This article analyses various police reform initiatives in Kenya as a form of ‘moral bordering’. Dra...
Over the course of the last 20 years, there has been an increase in the number of private security o...