This is a story of two deaths that occurred in two different locations, 15,000 km apart; one in Australia, and one in the United States. What these deaths have in common is the context in which they occurred. Both were men in their 30s, both were black, and both deaths occurred as a result of the criminal justice system’s colonial necropolitics, in which lives are subjected to the power of death through technologies of control, like the police. Mulrunji Doomadgee, an Indigenous Australian man, died in police custody on the 19th November 2004 and Rudy Eugene, a Haitian-American man, died as a result of police inflicted gunshot wounds on 26th May 2012. The fetishistic disavowal of the police violence that contributed to their deaths demonstra...
People in police custody are more likely to die prematurely, especially from violent causes. This ar...
This report analyses deaths occurring in custodial settings, such as prison and juvenile detention, ...
In common law countries like England, Australia, the USA and Canada, certain deaths come to be inves...
A similar psychosocial sequence surrounds cases of voodoo death and cases where dying is expedited. ...
The over-representation of vulnerable populations within the criminal justice system, and the role o...
In this report Jacqueline Joudo and Marissa Veld provide an overview of the characteristics of the 6...
This paper reports on a large-scale documentary analysis of all publicly available coroners’ reports...
Jacqueline Joudo summarises the annual report from the National Deaths in Custody Program, and shows...
Between 1 January 1980 and 31 May 1989, ninety-nine Aboriginal and Tones Strait Islander people died...
In this paper, I will explore the Australian context of human trafficking and slavery by reviewing n...
In the past five years, there have been numerous newspaper reports on police-involved deaths (PID) i...
The Coronial inquest into the death of Ms Dhu, a Yamatji woman from Western Australia is in its fina...
Using a number of case studies, the article considers deaths in police custody and in prison, which ...
Lecture by criminal lawyer Paula MorreauWednesday, October 13, 2010 – 12:30pmLocation: Osgoode Hall,...
Recent articles on Aboriginal deaths in custody appear to demonstrate that Aborigines and non aborig...
People in police custody are more likely to die prematurely, especially from violent causes. This ar...
This report analyses deaths occurring in custodial settings, such as prison and juvenile detention, ...
In common law countries like England, Australia, the USA and Canada, certain deaths come to be inves...
A similar psychosocial sequence surrounds cases of voodoo death and cases where dying is expedited. ...
The over-representation of vulnerable populations within the criminal justice system, and the role o...
In this report Jacqueline Joudo and Marissa Veld provide an overview of the characteristics of the 6...
This paper reports on a large-scale documentary analysis of all publicly available coroners’ reports...
Jacqueline Joudo summarises the annual report from the National Deaths in Custody Program, and shows...
Between 1 January 1980 and 31 May 1989, ninety-nine Aboriginal and Tones Strait Islander people died...
In this paper, I will explore the Australian context of human trafficking and slavery by reviewing n...
In the past five years, there have been numerous newspaper reports on police-involved deaths (PID) i...
The Coronial inquest into the death of Ms Dhu, a Yamatji woman from Western Australia is in its fina...
Using a number of case studies, the article considers deaths in police custody and in prison, which ...
Lecture by criminal lawyer Paula MorreauWednesday, October 13, 2010 – 12:30pmLocation: Osgoode Hall,...
Recent articles on Aboriginal deaths in custody appear to demonstrate that Aborigines and non aborig...
People in police custody are more likely to die prematurely, especially from violent causes. This ar...
This report analyses deaths occurring in custodial settings, such as prison and juvenile detention, ...
In common law countries like England, Australia, the USA and Canada, certain deaths come to be inves...