Policing the Revolution: The Transformation of Coercive Power and Venezuela's Security Landscape During Chavismo

Author:   Rebecca Hanson (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, University of Florida)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
ISBN:  

9780197680834


Pages:   280
Publication Date:   07 July 2025
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Policing the Revolution: The Transformation of Coercive Power and Venezuela's Security Landscape During Chavismo


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Author:   Rebecca Hanson (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, University of Florida)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 23.50cm , Length: 2.00cm
Weight:   0.484kg
ISBN:  

9780197680834


ISBN 10:   0197680836
Pages:   280
Publication Date:   07 July 2025
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

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Hanson's Policing the Revolution provides counterintuitive insights into the nature of politics and the state in Bolivarian Venezuela. The book addresses important and complex puzzles that fit Venezuela into debates about violence in Latin America, highlighting similarities but also key differences. Hanson perceptively shows that violence and crime in Venezuela emerge, in part, because of decisions made by state leaders that keep the police disorganized, thus reducing their capacity to engage in effective law enforcement and shifting the balance of police power in the country. Hanson's detailed and incisive ethnography of Venezuelan police provides critical insights into politics in that country and its police forces. * Desmond Arias, Marxe Chair in Western Hemisphere Affairs, Baruch College-CUNY * Our understanding of contemporary Venezuela has been impeded by broad brushstroke analyses that fail to penetrate some of the most important phenomena at play. Based on ten years of careful fieldwork-including participant observation with police officers in the most difficult of circumstances-Hanson provides one of the most insightful books that has been written on the Chavista period. Rather than the classic story of state-sponsored violence in service of authoritarian control, she reveals the pluralization of violent actors and the continual destabilization of relations between them. Hanson's access point is a focus on policing and security, but this is a book about the Bolivarian Revolution. All Venezuela scholars need to engage this text. * David Smilde, Favrot Professor of Human Relations, Tulane University * Policing the Revolution is a remarkable book offering an extraordinarily comprehensive account of the evolution of Venezuela's Bolivarian Revolution and Chavismo through the lens of policing and coercion, offering one of the few (and certainly the most robust) analysis to date on the left's approaches to security. The book's deep ethnographic approach masterfully pairs a focus on street-level officers with the vantage point of ordinary barrio residents to analyze how the revolution is experienced ""from below."" Rarely do we see ethnographies that consider police officers alongside the communities that bear the brunt of their abuses. By considering both perspectives jointly, we get a more nuanced and realistic understanding of the everyday practices that lay bare the contradictions of the Bolivarian Revolution * Yanilda Gonzalez, Professor of Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School *


Author Information

Rebecca Hanson is Assistant Professor at the University of Florida, with a joint appointment in the Department of Sociology and Criminology & Law and the Center for Latin American Studies and director of UF's International Ethnography Lab. Her research focuses on how policies and political changes that seek to reduce inequality and violence end up contributing to these problems and how changing modalities of violence in the 21st century affect state building and capacity, with a specific focus on policing. She is the coauthor of Harassed: Gender, Bodies, and Ethnographic Research (2019, with Patricia Richards).

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