Speaking of the institution of the police in his famous 1921 text “Zur Kritik der Gewalt” (“Toward the Critique of Violence”), Walter Benjamin gives two very important characteristics of police violence.1 The first and fundamental characteristic is that the police are always connected to violence but that the police’s role within the state is difficult to pinpoint, given that the police constitute an “institution of the modern State” (Benjamin 1986: 286–87). Our intention in this text is to show that police violence is a consequence of a deformation of the institution of police or a deformation of violence
History shows that police are one of the oldest services in human society or state. As elementary fo...
This work about policing institutions uses the works of Marx, Engels and Gramsci. The work argues t...
Divine violence, an idea set out in Walter Benjamin’s early essay “Critique of Violence,” is violenc...
Speaking of the institution of the police in his famous 1921 text “Zur Kritik der Gewalt” (“Toward ...
This article is focused on the analysis of paragraphs 10 and 11 of Walter Benjamin’s “Toward the Cri...
This chapter explores the phenomenon of political violence in its many forms. It focuses on the dist...
Marking the centenary of Walter Benjamin's immensely influential essay, "Toward the Critique of Viol...
We are in the midst of a long overdue reevaluation of police violence. To date, most conversations h...
This article uses Walter Benjamin's theoretical claims in the ‘Critique of violence’ to shed light o...
International audienceOverview Police as an institution cannot be said to have inspired in-depth con...
This article addresses the history of police violence and extra-legal killings of Black people and a...
In free and democratic societies, police are a contradiction. Their authority and capacity to coerce...
The article revisits Walter Benjamin\u2019s reflection on the concept of violence, attempting to ret...
Transforming as it does from an exemplar of meticulous philosophical analysis into an allusive polit...
For more than fifty years, the problems endemic to municipal policing in the United States--brutalit...
History shows that police are one of the oldest services in human society or state. As elementary fo...
This work about policing institutions uses the works of Marx, Engels and Gramsci. The work argues t...
Divine violence, an idea set out in Walter Benjamin’s early essay “Critique of Violence,” is violenc...
Speaking of the institution of the police in his famous 1921 text “Zur Kritik der Gewalt” (“Toward ...
This article is focused on the analysis of paragraphs 10 and 11 of Walter Benjamin’s “Toward the Cri...
This chapter explores the phenomenon of political violence in its many forms. It focuses on the dist...
Marking the centenary of Walter Benjamin's immensely influential essay, "Toward the Critique of Viol...
We are in the midst of a long overdue reevaluation of police violence. To date, most conversations h...
This article uses Walter Benjamin's theoretical claims in the ‘Critique of violence’ to shed light o...
International audienceOverview Police as an institution cannot be said to have inspired in-depth con...
This article addresses the history of police violence and extra-legal killings of Black people and a...
In free and democratic societies, police are a contradiction. Their authority and capacity to coerce...
The article revisits Walter Benjamin\u2019s reflection on the concept of violence, attempting to ret...
Transforming as it does from an exemplar of meticulous philosophical analysis into an allusive polit...
For more than fifty years, the problems endemic to municipal policing in the United States--brutalit...
History shows that police are one of the oldest services in human society or state. As elementary fo...
This work about policing institutions uses the works of Marx, Engels and Gramsci. The work argues t...
Divine violence, an idea set out in Walter Benjamin’s early essay “Critique of Violence,” is violenc...