In this paper, we advocate identifying the colonizing logics of race in criminological analysis, in recognition of their enduring postcolonial presence in societies like the United Kingdom. Our argument unfolds through the life stories narrated by three men entangled by colonial remnants of power(lessness), subservience, and criminalization. For Cairo (black) and Rafan (Asian), their subalternity is exposed through their vulnerability to racialized stereotypes which have a foundation in colonial histories. Both young minority ethnic men are also situated in a transnational, glocalized frame in which their racialized and gendered identities prescribed the nature of their belonging to a British nation-state irrevocably connected to the Empire...
Considerable historical attention has been paid to the end of Empire in Britain’s East African colon...
Based on the premise that the project of Western Modernity is a structuring element of our societies...
If the colonial ‘other’, as Edward Said so eloquently showed, was as much invented or imagined as ho...
In this paper, we advocate identifying the colonizing logics of race in criminological analysis, in ...
In this article we use Emirbayer and Desmond’s institutional reflexivity framework to critically exa...
In this article we use Emirbayer and Desmond’s institutional reflexivity framework to critically exa...
This chapter considers the challenges and opportunities that a postcolonial practice might generate ...
This paper addresses the question of the extent to which the colonial past provides material for con...
This paper addresses the question of the extent to which the colonial past provides material for con...
This thesis will examine the securitization of British citizenship in the 21st century as presented ...
This thesis explores the life stories of four men who were deported from the UK to Jamaica following...
This PhD thesis examines how Eritrean forced migrants in the UK form outside imaginaries about desti...
"Based on the premise that the project of Western Modernity is a structuring element of our societie...
The discipline of Western criminology emerged during the colonial era as a means of controlling the ...
Today I am going to present a paper, Racial Profiling in the UK – Continued Victimisation of BME Gro...
Considerable historical attention has been paid to the end of Empire in Britain’s East African colon...
Based on the premise that the project of Western Modernity is a structuring element of our societies...
If the colonial ‘other’, as Edward Said so eloquently showed, was as much invented or imagined as ho...
In this paper, we advocate identifying the colonizing logics of race in criminological analysis, in ...
In this article we use Emirbayer and Desmond’s institutional reflexivity framework to critically exa...
In this article we use Emirbayer and Desmond’s institutional reflexivity framework to critically exa...
This chapter considers the challenges and opportunities that a postcolonial practice might generate ...
This paper addresses the question of the extent to which the colonial past provides material for con...
This paper addresses the question of the extent to which the colonial past provides material for con...
This thesis will examine the securitization of British citizenship in the 21st century as presented ...
This thesis explores the life stories of four men who were deported from the UK to Jamaica following...
This PhD thesis examines how Eritrean forced migrants in the UK form outside imaginaries about desti...
"Based on the premise that the project of Western Modernity is a structuring element of our societie...
The discipline of Western criminology emerged during the colonial era as a means of controlling the ...
Today I am going to present a paper, Racial Profiling in the UK – Continued Victimisation of BME Gro...
Considerable historical attention has been paid to the end of Empire in Britain’s East African colon...
Based on the premise that the project of Western Modernity is a structuring element of our societies...
If the colonial ‘other’, as Edward Said so eloquently showed, was as much invented or imagined as ho...