Police in Africa: The Street Level View
Police in Africa: The Street Level View
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Abstract
State police forces in Africa are a curiously neglected subject of study, even within the framework of security issues and African states. This book brings together criminologists, anthropologists, sociologists, historians, political scientists and others who have engaged with police forces across the continent and the publics with whom they interact to provide street-level perspectives from below and inside Africa’s police forces. The contributors consider historical trajectories and particular configurations of police power within wider political systems, then examine the ‘inside view’ of police forces as state institutions – the challenges, preoccupations, professional ethics and self-perceptions of police officers – and finally look at how African police officers go about their work in terms of everyday practices and engagements with the public.The studies span the continent, from South Africa to Sierra Leone, and illustrate similarities and differences in Anglophone, Francophone and Lusophone states, post-socialist, post-military and post-conflict contexts, and amid both centralizsation and devolution of policing powers, democratic transitions and new illiberal regimes, all the while keeping a strong ethnographic focus on police officers and their work.
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Front Matter
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Introduction: Policing in Africa Reconsidered
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Part I What is the Police in Contemporary Africa?
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1
Policing Africa: Structures and Pathways
Klaus Schlichte
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2
What is the Concept of Professionalization Good for? An Argument from Late Colonialism
Joël Glasman
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3
The Colonial Subtext of British-Led Police Reform in Sierra Leone
Erlend Grøner Krogstad
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4
Policing During and After Apartheid: A New Perspective on Continuity and Change11Close
Jonny Steinberg
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5
Historicising Vigilante Policing in Plateau State, Nigeria
Jimam Lar
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1
Policing Africa: Structures and Pathways
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Part II Who are the Police in Africa?
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6
Who are the Police in Africa?
Thomas Bierschenk
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7
Somewhere Between Green and Blue: A Special Police Unit in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
Laura Thurmann
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8
Moonlighting: Crossing the Public-Private Policing Divide in Durban, South Africa
Tessa Diphoorn
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9
Risk and Motivation in Police Work in Nigeria
Olly Owen
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10
Fighting for Respect: Violence, Masculinity and Legitimacy in the South African Police Service
Andrew Faull
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6
Who are the Police in Africa?
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Part III How are the Police Doing their Work?
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Policing Boundaries: The Cultural Work of African Policing
David Pratten
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12
The Belly of the Police
Julia Hornberger
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13
Inside the Police Stations in Maputo City: Between Legality and Legitimacy
Helene Maria Kyed
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14
Money, Morals and Law: The Legitimacy of Police Traffic Checks in Ghana
Jan Beek
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15
Soft Law Enforcement in the Nigerien Gendarmerie: How a Case is Born
Mirco Göpfert
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Epilogue
Alice Hills
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11
Policing Boundaries: The Cultural Work of African Policing
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End Matter
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