Policing the Pandemic: How Public Health Becomes Public Order

Author:   Lambros Fatsis (City, University of London) ,  Melayna Lamb (Independent writer and academic based in London)
Publisher:   Bristol University Press
ISBN:  

9781447361077


Pages:   148
Publication Date:   07 December 2021
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Policing the Pandemic: How Public Health Becomes Public Order


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Overview

The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the inadequacies of the state's response to public health and public order issues through deeply flawed legislation. Written in the context of the #Blacklivesmatter protests, this book explores why law enforcement responses to a public health emergency are prioritised over welfare provision and what this tells us about the state's criminal justice institutions. Informing scholarly, civic and activist thinking on the political nature of policing, it reveals how increasing police powers disproportionately affects black people and suggests alternative ways of designing public safety beyond a law enforcement context. 'Makes a compelling case for a critical assessment of what the COVID-19 pandemic can tell us about policing, health and governance all of the time. Lively, topical and precisely what we need.' - Peter Squires, University of Brighton

Full Product Details

Author:   Lambros Fatsis (City, University of London) ,  Melayna Lamb (Independent writer and academic based in London)
Publisher:   Bristol University Press
Imprint:   Policy Press
ISBN:  

9781447361077


ISBN 10:   1447361075
Pages:   148
Publication Date:   07 December 2021
Audience:   General/trade ,  General/trade ,  General ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1. Policing 'the public' as a virus 2. The order of public health 3. Safety without police: an abolitionist provocation

Reviews

"""Succinct, accessible, and informative for students and professionals alike, 'Policing the Pandemic is key for imagining an abolitionist present and future that promotes care, community, and safety disentangled from policing's security and order"" Crime Media Culture"


Makes a compelling case for a critical assessment of what the COVID-19 pandemic can tell us about policing, health and governance all of the time. Lively, topical and precisely what we need. Peter Squires, University of Brighton Offers us an urgent, rigorous and visionary guide to a world in which the response to ill health is state violence. The authors provide a thoroughly researched and compelling case for alternatives to policing, not just in relation to disease and infection, but in all areas of public life. Adam Elliot-Cooper, Queen Mary University of London This thoughtful book is deeply sceptical about the ways the resulting emergency has been used to transform our state and the way we are ruled. The authors suggest radical responses to the consolidation of austere and authoritarian patterns in our declining political culture. Paul Gilroy, University College London Shows that when political leaders use police to paper over austerity and inequality, the police often view the public as a threat to be neutralised, rather than protected. This crisis demands that we build a world that provides real care, not more police. Alex S. Vitale, Brooklyn College


Author Information

Lambros Fatsis is a Senior Lecturer in Criminology at City, University of London. His research fuses Cultural Criminology with Black radical thought, focusing on police racism and the criminalisation of Black music subcultures. His co-authored book with Mark Carrigan, The Public and Their Platforms Public Sociology in an Era of Social Media is published by Bristol University Press. Melayna Lamb is a Lecturer at the University of Law, London. Her research interests span the fields and intersections of political philosophy, critical theory and Black radical thought. Her monograph, A Philosophical History of Police Power is forthcoming with Bloomsbury.

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