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Policing the danger narrative

    1. [1] Boston College Law School
  • Localización: The journal of criminal law and criminology, ISSN 0091-4169, Vol. 113, Nº. 3, 2023, págs. 473-540
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • The clamor for police reform in the United States has reached a fever pitch. The current debate has mainly centered around questions of police function: What functions should police perform, and how should they perform them to avoid injustice and unnecessary harm? This Article, in contrast, focuses on a central aspect of police culture—namely, how police envision their relationship to those policed. It exposes the vast reach of a deeply engrained “danger narrative” and demonstrates the disastrous consequences that this narrative has helped to bring about. Reinforced by police training, codified by courts, and broadly deployed, the danger narrative is an “us-versus-them” ideology that envisions “them”—all persons whom police are observing, investigating, detaining—as a lethal danger to “us”—law enforcement personnel. Structural and functional reforms have little hope of succeeding unless this toxic narrative can be displaced.


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