We are in the midst of a long overdue reevaluation of police violence. To date, most conversations have focused on excessive uses of force—a problem of dismaying reach, with deep and lurid historical roots. Behind these conversations, however, a more fundamental question looms: what justifies police force even when it is not excessive? This question lacks a consensus answer; despite the prevalence of police violence in our legal order, it turns out we do not have a unified political theory to account for such violence. In this Essay, I sketch a number of familiar rationales for police violence and show why each—at least in its current configuration—is insufficient to carry the conceptual burden
Crimes by and against police officers during the performance of their duties are treated differently...
Abstract David Graeber’s essay On the phenomenology of giant puppets: Broken windows, imaginary jar...
Recent high-profile incidents involving the deadly application of force in the United States sparked...
We are in the midst of a long overdue reevaluation of police violence. To date, most conversations h...
For more than fifty years, the problems endemic to municipal policing in the United States--brutalit...
We usually think there is a difference between the police and the military. Recently, however, the p...
Why does institutional police brutality continue so brazenly? Criminologists and other social scien...
I defend the view that a significant ethical distinction can be made between justified killing in se...
In free and democratic societies, police are a contradiction. Their authority and capacity to coerce...
Speaking of the institution of the police in his famous 1921 text “Zur Kritik der Gewalt” (“Toward ...
This essay considers the ideological work performed by the term “paramilitary.” Departing from the f...
Police violence has historically played an important role in shaping public attitudes toward the gov...
This article argues that police studies should draw on the sociology of punishment to better underst...
This dissertation offers a systematic account of the relationship between the police and the democra...
Why do people believe that violence is acceptable? In this article, the authors study people's norma...
Crimes by and against police officers during the performance of their duties are treated differently...
Abstract David Graeber’s essay On the phenomenology of giant puppets: Broken windows, imaginary jar...
Recent high-profile incidents involving the deadly application of force in the United States sparked...
We are in the midst of a long overdue reevaluation of police violence. To date, most conversations h...
For more than fifty years, the problems endemic to municipal policing in the United States--brutalit...
We usually think there is a difference between the police and the military. Recently, however, the p...
Why does institutional police brutality continue so brazenly? Criminologists and other social scien...
I defend the view that a significant ethical distinction can be made between justified killing in se...
In free and democratic societies, police are a contradiction. Their authority and capacity to coerce...
Speaking of the institution of the police in his famous 1921 text “Zur Kritik der Gewalt” (“Toward ...
This essay considers the ideological work performed by the term “paramilitary.” Departing from the f...
Police violence has historically played an important role in shaping public attitudes toward the gov...
This article argues that police studies should draw on the sociology of punishment to better underst...
This dissertation offers a systematic account of the relationship between the police and the democra...
Why do people believe that violence is acceptable? In this article, the authors study people's norma...
Crimes by and against police officers during the performance of their duties are treated differently...
Abstract David Graeber’s essay On the phenomenology of giant puppets: Broken windows, imaginary jar...
Recent high-profile incidents involving the deadly application of force in the United States sparked...