Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Security Governance, Policing, and Local Capacity [Kõva köide]

(University of Cape Town, South Africa), (University of Bergen, Norway)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 258 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 498 g, 18 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Advances in Police Theory and Practice
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Dec-2012
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1420090143
  • ISBN-13: 9781420090147
  • Formaat: Hardback, 258 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 498 g, 18 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Advances in Police Theory and Practice
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Dec-2012
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1420090143
  • ISBN-13: 9781420090147

The security governance of South Africa has faced immense challenges amid post-apartheid constitutional and political transformations. In many cases, policing and governmental organizations have failed to provide security and other services to the poorest inhabitants. Security Governance, Policing, and Local Capacity explores an experiment that took place in Zwelethemba—located in South Africa’s Western Cape Province—to establish legitimate and effective nonstate security governance within poor urban settlements.

There has been, and continues to be, much reticence to endorsing private forms of security governance that operate outside of state institutions within local communities. Those initiatives have often led to situations where force is used illegally and punishment is dispensed arbitrarily and brutally. This book explores the extent to which this model of mobilizing local knowledge and capacity was able to effectively achieve justice, democracy, accountability, and development in this region.

Whenever possible, the book includes raw data and a thorough analysis of existing information on security governance. Examining this case and its outcome, the authors provide a theoretical analysis of the model used and present a series of design principles for future applications in local security governance. The book concludes that poor communities are a significant source of untapped resources that can, under certain conditions, be mobilized to significantly enhance safety. This volume is an important examination of experimental models and a presentation of new groundbreaking theory on engaging the local community in solving security governance problems.

Foreword xi
Series Preface xvii
Acknowledgments xix
About the Authors xxi
1 Introduction
1(26)
Definitions
7(1)
Good Security Governance
8(2)
The Zwelethemba Road
10(4)
Reaching Zwelethemba
14(8)
A Road Block
22(1)
Roads from Zwelethemba
22(1)
The Road to This Book
23(2)
Endnotes
25(2)
2 Justice Through Peace
27(24)
Introduction
27(1)
Justice as Just Deserts
28(2)
Restorative Justice: Justice as Healing
30(5)
Restorative Justice and the Criminal Justice System
35(3)
Zwelethemba's Justice
38(8)
Mechanisms for Building Justice Through Peace
46(2)
Conclusion
48(1)
Endnotes
49(2)
3 Democracy in Many Places
51(36)
Introduction
51(2)
Shifting Conceptions
53(5)
Democratic Deficit
58(2)
Democracy Blackmail
60(3)
The Displacement of Politics as a Democratic Requirement
63(5)
Zwelethemba and the Displacement of Politics
68(2)
Zwelethemba and the Challenge of Building Private Democratic Spaces
70(1)
Disputes Over Property
71(1)
"Futures Games" Versus "Blaming Games"
71(1)
Making Up and Resolving Disputes
72(1)
Building Symbolic Capital
72(1)
Preventing Escalation
73(1)
Social Disputes
74(1)
Increasing the Level of Transparency
74(1)
Drawing Upon Community Norms and Values
74(2)
Root Causes
76(2)
Domestic Disputes
78(1)
Mobilizing Normative Standards
79(2)
Aligning Local and Cosmopolitan Values
81(2)
Reviews and Reflection on Practice
83(1)
Conclusion
83(3)
Endnotes
86(1)
4 Multiple Accountabilities
87(40)
Accountability-Where We Have Been
87(3)
A New Crisis of Accountability?
90(5)
New Ideas on How to Perceive and Strengthen Accountability
95(8)
The Zwelethemba Experience-Accountability Mechanisms and Challenges
103(4)
Communal Accountability
107(2)
Directly Deliberative Accountability
109(1)
Horizontal Accountability
110(2)
Hierarchical Accountability
112(1)
Accountability Relations Between the Peace Committees and the Community Peace Program
113(1)
Disrespecting the Framework
114(1)
Accountability Relations to the South African State and Its Constitution
115(1)
Accountability in Learning Processes
116(2)
Accountability Through the Market
118(4)
Conclusion
122(2)
Endnotes
124(3)
5 Human Rights in Development
127(38)
No Development Without a Strong State
127(1)
What Is a Strong State?
128(4)
Development and Human Rights
132(1)
Human Rights
133(4)
Reconciling Universal Human Rights With Local Norms
137(2)
Reconciling Tensions Within the Family of Human Rights
139(3)
Human Development
142(2)
Building Individual Capacity
144(3)
Reimagining Strategies of Collective Engagement
147(3)
The McGregor Experiment
150(3)
Human Security
153(5)
Zwelethemba-Mobilizing the Savages to Fight the Barbarians?
158(2)
Conclusion
160(2)
Endnotes
162(3)
6 Conclusion: Zwelethemba's Hope
165(12)
A Road Block and Beyond?
172(3)
Endnotes
175(2)
References 177(30)
Appendix 207(18)
Index 225(10)
A Call for Authors 235
Jan Froestad is an Associate Professor at the Department of Administration and Organization Theory, University of Bergen Norway.

Clifford Shearing is the Director of Centre of Criminology, Department of Public Law, Faculty of Law, University of Cape Town.