LEADER 11421nam 2200661 450 001 9910731426303321 005 20230619081455.0 010 $a0-19-198340-3 010 $a0-19-289910-4 010 $a0-19-289908-2 024 7 $a10.1093/oso/9780192899002.001.0001 035 $a(MiAaPQ)EBC7248873 035 $a(Au-PeEL)EBL7248873 035 $a(OCoLC)1381710522 035 $a(StDuBDS)9780191983405 035 $a(EXLCZ)9926637856500041 100 $a20230424d2023 fy| 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurcnu|||||||| 181 $ctxt$2rdacontent 182 $cc$2rdamedia 183 $acr$2rdacarrier 200 00$aDecolonizing the criminal question $ecolonial legacies, contemporary problems /$fedited by Ana Aliverti, Henrique Carvalho, Anastasia Chamberlen, Ma?ximo Sozzo$b[electronic resource] 205 $aFirst edition. 210 1$aOxford :$cOxford University Press,$d2023. 215 $a1 online resource (376 pages) 225 1 $aOxford scholarship online 300 $aThis edition also issued in print: 2023. 300 $a"This is an open access publication, available online and distributed under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution - Non Commercial - No Derivatives 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)"--Title page verso. 311 08$aPrint version: Aliverti, Ana Decolonizing the Criminal Question Oxford : Oxford University Press, Incorporated,c2023 9780192899002 320 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index. 327 $aIntro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- List of Contributors -- Introduction -- Overview -- References -- 1. Unsettling Concepts and Perspectives -- 1. Decoloniality, Abolitionism, and the Disruption of Penal Power -- Introduction -- Global State Violence and Unknowing Criminology -- Criminological Innocence -- Decolonial Knowledges -- Strategies for Decolonial Activism -- Conclusion -- References -- 2. Abolition and (De)colonization: Cutting the Criminal Question's Gordian Knot -- Introduction -- A Decolonized Criminal Question? A Decolonized Criminology? -- Colonialism, Justice, and the Concept of Crime -- Criminology, its Colonial Origins, and its Relationship with the State -- 'Race' and the Invention of the Criminal -- Beyond the Criminal Question: The Need for a Decolonial Abolitionist Praxis -- References -- 3. The Weight of Empire: Crime, Violence, and Social Control in Latin America-and the Promise of Southern Criminology -- Introduction -- The Southern Criminology Project -- A Critical Elaboration of Southern Criminology: Capitalism, Colonialism, and Empire -- The Latin American Crime Control Fields: A Southern Perspective -- Crime and Violence Under the Colonial Matrix of Power -- Imprisonment as a Form of Penal Excess Against Marginalized Groups -- Militarized Policing and the Upsurge of Police Brutality in Recent Times: The Covid-19 Pandemic -- State Building, State Capacity, and Links with Crime and Punishment in Latin America -- Conclusion: From the Punitive Turn to the Decolonial Turn -- References -- 4. From Genocidal Imperialist Despotism to Genocidal Neocolonial Dictatorship: Decolonizing Criminology and Criminal Justice with Indigenous Models of Democratization -- Introduction -- Decolonization as Resistance Against Colonization -- European Colonial Despotism and Resistance -- Conclusion -- References. 327 $a2. Contextualizing the Criminal Question -- 5. A Postcolonial Condition of Policing?: Exploring Policing and Social Movements in Pakistan and Nigeria -- Introduction -- A Framework for Postcolonial Policing -- Pakistan -- Pashtun Tahaffuz Movement -- Persistence of PCP in Pakistan -- Nigeria -- #EndSARS -- Persistence of PCP in Nigeria -- Conclusion -- References -- 6. Extrajudicial Punishment and the Criminal Question: The Case of 'Postcolonial' South Africa -- Introduction -- Extrajudicial Punishment and the Abdication of Liberal Law During Colonialism and Apartheid -- Extrajudicial Punishment (in Prisons and Elsewhere) Post-1994 -- Makwanyane -- Arrest and bail as extrajudicial punishment -- Civilian-Led Extrajudicial Punishment in Informal Settlements and Former Black Townships -- 'Repertoires of violence' -- Conclusion -- References -- 7. Carceral Cultures in Contemporary India -- Introduction -- A Decolonial Perspective-Introductory Remarks -- Carceral Culture and the Chaotic Everyday in Prison -- Vignettes of Carceral Spillovers -- Carceral Culture and the Politics of Disposability -- Is a Decolonial Perspective Possible? -- References -- 3. Locating Colonial Duress -- 8. 'Muslims Have No Borders, Only Horizons': A Genealogy of Border Criminality in Algeria and France, 1844 to Present -- Introduction -- Imagining and Producing the 'Borderless' Muslim -- The Administrative Internment Regime (1840s-1914) -- Afterlives of Internment -- Conclusion: What Is to Be Done? -- References -- 9. The Coloniality of Justice: Naturalized Divisions During Pre-Trial Hearings in Brazil -- Introduction -- Citizenship and the Colonial Period -- Coloniality and Citizenship -- Analysis -- Space and Place -- Boundaried Citizenship -- Whiteness as the Point of Departure -- Normalization of Black Pain and Death -- Discussion -- Temporal Dimension -- Spatial Dimension. 327 $aSubjective Dimension -- References -- 10. Contextualizing Racialized Exclusion and Criminalization in Postcolonial Israel: Policing of Israeli Ethiopian Citizens and Detention of Sudanese and Eritrean Asylum Seekers -- Introduction -- A Note on Methods and Scope -- Socio-Historical Context-An Ethnonational Settler State -- The Policing of Ethiopian Jewish Citizens -- Detention of Asylum Seekers from Sudan and Eritrea -- Connecting Racialized Exclusions -- Conclusion -- References -- 11. Coloniality and Structural Violence in the Criminalization of Black and Indigenous Populations in Brazil -- Introduction: Coloniality and the Criminalization of the Subaltern -- Brazil has a Huge Past Ahead -- The Authoritarian Republican Progress -- The Integration of the Indigenous People by Means of Punishment -- Racial Selectivity in Brazilian Policing -- Conclusion -- References -- 4. Mapping Global Connections -- 12. Emancipatory Pathways or Postcolonial Pitfalls?: Navigating Global Policing Mobilities Through the Atlantic Archipelago of Cape Verde -- Introduction -- Cape Verde and Decolonizing Policing Scholarship -- Qualifying Cape Verdean Exceptionalism -- Morabeza for Transnational Policing? -- Occidental 'Policeness' and Subaltern Global Cops -- International Broker or Postcolonial Intermediary? Atlantic Policing of Global Insecurities -- 'If They Build It, Will They Come?' An International Police Academy for Cape Verde -- Conclusion -- References -- 13. 'Nothing is Lost, Everything is ? Transferred': Transnational Institutionalization and Ideological Legitimation of Torture as a Neocolonial State Crime -- Introduction -- The Algerian 'War of Decolonization' (1954-1962) -- The Argentine Dirty War (1976-1983) -- Neocolonialism as the Rationale Behind the Transnational Institutionalization and Ideological Legitimation of Torture -- Conclusion -- References. 327 $a14. The Legacy of Colonial Patriarchy in the Current Administration of the Malaysian Death Penalty: The Hyper-Sentencing of Foreign National Women to Death for Drug Trafficking -- Introduction -- Scholarship on Capital Punishment and Colonization -- An Overview of the Current Scope and Application of the Malaysian Death Penalty -- The Double Colonial Legacy: Two Converging Histories -- The Research Problem: The Death Penalty for Drug Trafficking as a Modern Manifestation of Colonial Patriarchy and Penality -- The hyper-sentencing of foreign national women for drug trafficking -- 'Securitization' in response to the 'foreign threat' of drug trafficking -- Conclusion -- References -- 5. Moving Forward: New Methods and Approaches -- 15. Criminal Questions, Colonial Hinterlands, Personal Experience: A Symptomatic Reading -- Introduction -- Methodological Approach-Symptomatic Reading -- Cairo's Jamaican Excursions and Versions -- Imperializing Merton? -- Rafan's Criminal Justice Rejections and Recreations -- The postcolony -- Warren: Transnational Whiteness Refusing to be Seen -- 'Don't get me white'? racial routes in and out of Zimbabwe, London, and Essex -- Accents of colonial hierarchy, evidence of whiteness -- Conclusions: Colonial Violence, White Innocence, Criminal Questions -- Making connections: coloniality and criminology -- References -- 16. Ayllu and Mestizaje: A Decolonial Feminist View of Women's Imprisonment in Peru -- Introduction -- The Modern-Colonial-Patriarchal Structure -- Race, Gender, and Imprisonment: The Modern-Colonial-Patriarchal Penitentiary -- Ayllu and Mestizaje: Women in Contemporary Prisons in Lima, Peru -- Ayllu: A Communitarian Organizational System within Santa Monica -- Mestizas and Mestizaje: About the 'Race'-Ethnic-Cultural Dimension in Prison -- Conclusion: Final Reflections -- References. 327 $a17. An Alternative Spotlight: Colonial Legacies, Therapeutic Jurisprudence, and the Enigma of Healing -- Introduction -- The therapeutic jurisprudence approach -- Colonial Legacies: A Case Study of Therapeutic Jurisprudence Applied -- Cultural tokenism -- Assimilation through subjugation -- Colonial consciousness -- The Enigma of Healing -- Conclusion -- References -- 18. In Our Experience: Recognizing and Challenging Cognitive Imperialism -- Introduction: Colonization and Cognitive Imperialism -- Experiencing criminal justice academe: the data -- Recognizing and Reflecting on Cognitive Imperialism -- Reorienting and Responding to Cognitive Imperialism -- Recover and Reform: Seeking Constructive Ways Forward -- Conclusion -- References -- Conclusion: Teasing Out the Criminal Question, Building a Decolonizing Horizon -- Overview -- Problematizing and Dismantling Dynamics of Hierarchization, Subordination, and Dependency in Knowledge Production and Circulation -- Continuities, Discontinues, Permutations, and Erasures in the Colonial Matrix of the Criminal Question -- Methodological Approaches: Reflexivity, Narratives of Resistance and Enduring Struggles -- Politics and Ethics -- References -- Index. 330 8 $aThis volume explores the uneasy relationship between crime, crime control and colonialism, foregrounding the relevance of the legacies of this relationship to criminological enquiries. It invites and pursues a better understanding of the links between imperialism and colonialism on the one hand, and nationalism and globalisation on the other. 410 0$aOxford scholarship online. 606 $aCriminal law$zDeveloping countries$xHistory 606 $aColonization 606 $aLaw$2ukslc 606 $aLaws of specific jurisdictions & specific areas of law$2thema 607 $aDeveloping countries$xColonization 615 0$aCriminal law$xHistory. 615 0$aColonization. 615 7$aLaw. 615 7$aLaws of specific jurisdictions & specific areas of law. 676 $a929 702 $aAliverti$b Ana J. 702 $aCarvalho$b Henrique 702 $aChamberlen$b Anastasia 702 $aSozzo$b Ma?ximo 801 0$bStDuBDS 801 1$bStDuBDS 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910731426303321 996 $aDecolonizing the criminal question$93401904 997 $aUNINA