kat_lair: (GEN - time marches on)
kat_lair ([personal profile] kat_lair) wrote2011-04-23 08:41 am

your quote of the day



"Individuals who live under conditions of pervasive insecurity tend to make demands for what they judge to be “tough” anticrime measures (more police, more police powers, crackdowns on this offence or those suspects, stiffer sentencing, harsher penal regimes, and so on) in ways that display impatience with informed democratic deliberation, seek to suspend or abandon basic rights, foster hostility toward minorities and outsiders, and risk melding their interests and identities with those of the state whose “protective” power they seek to mobilize. This process is vicious and circular because once such demands are met in the terms in which they are presented, it becomes difficult to create the political and cultural conditions wherein the pace of such measures can be slowed, or a change or reversal of direction effected—thereby effecting a potentially endless “ratcheting up” in police numbers, or incarceration rates, or curtailments of basic liberties. And if such actions are perceived to have “failed,” or are ideologically depicted in those terms— because crime rates go up, or a child is abducted, or a group of youths run amok, or another terrorist outrage occurs—this overwhelmingly prompts calls for still “tougher” measures—only this time with a heavier dosage. A democracy- and liberty-eroding spiral is thus entered in ways it becomes hard to escape. A form of security politics gets entrenched that does much to put at risk democratic principles and basic rights, while doing little to make citizens either any safer or any more secure. As the “war on terror” is reminding us once again, anxious citizens make bad democrats." - Loader, 2006: 216



Full Ref:
Loader, I. (2006). ‘Policing, Recognition, and Belonging.’ The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 605 (1): 201-221.


[identity profile] hugemind.livejournal.com 2011-04-23 07:56 am (UTC)(link)
Three things randomly pop to mind after reading that:

1. the election result in Finland
2. the current state of national politics in various european countries
3. "V for Vendetta"

I'm really hoping that one has nothing to do with the other.

Also, because I failed to comment on this earlier re: the conference: dude, seriously cool!

[identity profile] moth2fic.livejournal.com 2011-04-23 08:03 am (UTC)(link)
A good summary. Ties in to terrorism, of course, but also to attitudes to refugees, migrant workers, the unemployed, etc.

[identity profile] teithiwr.livejournal.com 2011-04-23 08:07 am (UTC)(link)
I have nothing more articulate to say than

argh. YES.

[identity profile] kat-lair.livejournal.com 2011-04-23 09:13 am (UTC)(link)
Huh, that's like a step-by-step explanation of how things will progress... *grimaces*

And thank you! I have booked travel (except for the Stockholm-Turku ferry...) and accommodation, now just have to actually write the paper...

[identity profile] kat-lair.livejournal.com 2011-04-23 09:14 am (UTC)(link)
I thought it was a good summary of the processes I understand but sometimes find hard to explain to others, yeah.

[identity profile] kat-lair.livejournal.com 2011-04-23 09:16 am (UTC)(link)
I know, just want to shake some people and point at this and go 'THIS, THIS HERE, DON'T YOU SEEEEEEEEEEEE?'

Argh indeed.

never too grown-up to giggle

[identity profile] iniq.livejournal.com 2011-04-23 09:38 am (UTC)(link)
I agree with the argh yes and want to point to Bhatia articles on the danger of the emotionalization of facts etc (because we get to Loader because we listen to the media's spin on things), BUT... what I do want to point out more than that is that the article appears in ANNALS and has the word PENAL in it.

Life's so serious, we should... I mean we almost have to... you know. *ahem*

Re: never too grown-up to giggle

[identity profile] kat-lair.livejournal.com 2011-04-23 10:16 am (UTC)(link)
Ahahaha, maturity is so over-rated. And this was indeed a very penetrative analysis... :D