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E-raamat: Conflict, Politics and Crime: Aboriginal Communities and the Police

  • Formaat: 320 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Jul-2020
  • Kirjastus: Allen & Unwin
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000256635
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: 320 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Jul-2020
  • Kirjastus: Allen & Unwin
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000256635

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Aboriginal people are grossly over-represented before the courts and in our gaols. Despite numerous inquiries, State and Federal, and the considerable funds spent trying to understand this phenomenon, nothing has changed. Indigenous people continue to be apprehended, sentenced, incarcerated and die in gaols. One part of this depressing and seemingly inexorable process is the behaviour of police.

Drawing on research from across Australia, Chris Cunneen focuses on how police and Aboriginal people interact in urban and rural environments. He explores police history and police culture, the nature of Aboriginal offending and the prevalence of over-policing, the use of police discretion, the particular circumstances of Aboriginal youth and Aboriginal women, the experience of community policing and the key police responses to Aboriginal issues. He traces the pressures on both sides of the equation brought by new political demands.

In exploring these issues, Conflict, Politics and Crime argues that changing the nature of contemporary relations between Aboriginal people and the police is a key to altering Aboriginal over-representation in the criminal justice system, and a step towards the advancement of human rights.
Acknowledgments vii
List of acronyms
viii
List of tables
ix
Introduction
1(16)
The criminalisation of Indigenous people
17(29)
Police custody
18(3)
Imprisonment
21(2)
Juvenile detention
23(1)
Explaining Aboriginal offending patterns and over-representation
24(1)
Offending patterns
25(4)
The impact of policing on offending
29(3)
The law and policing
32(2)
Judicial decision-making
34(2)
Spatial factors: environment and location
36(2)
Cultural difference
38(2)
Socioeconomic factors
40(2)
Resistance
42(1)
Theorising the impact of policing on crime figures
43(3)
The nature of colonial policing
46(34)
Dispossession and war: police as military
49(13)
The intensity of surveillance: police as guardians
62(4)
The regulation of personal, familiar and social relations
66(7)
Assimilation
73(2)
The nature of colonial policing
75(5)
From over-policing to zero tolerance
80(26)
Over-policing
85(6)
Policing social and cultural life
91(6)
Paramilitary police and public order
97(5)
Over-policing and zero tolerance
102(4)
Terror, violence and the abuse of human rights
106(24)
Terror and the politics of colonialism
106(2)
Policing as terror
108(13)
Terror and trauma
121(6)
The abuse of human rights
127(3)
Police culture and the use of discretion
130(27)
Police discretion and Indigenous young people
132(11)
Police culture
143(11)
Discretion, police culture and human rights
154(3)
Policing Indigenous women
157(23)
Colonisation as a gendered project
158(2)
Policing responses to violence against Indigenous women
160(5)
Indigenous women and public order offences
165(1)
The effects of public order policing
166(14)
Governance and the policing of contested space
180(25)
Social space and social order: the spatiality of policing
180(11)
Resistance and governance
191(14)
The reform of policing policies
205(24)
Community policing and proportional responses
206(4)
Aboriginal Policy Statements and Aboriginal Strategic Plans
210(3)
Management strategies
213(3)
Aboriginal Community Police and Community Liaison Officers
216(5)
The demand for greater autonomy: Aboriginal Justice Agreements
221(8)
Policing and postcolonial self-determination
229(24)
Citizenship, human rights and the criminal justice system
233(4)
Indigenous self-determination
237(7)
Self-determination in the international context
244(9)
Notes 253(16)
Bibliography 269(26)
Index 295