A Durkheimian Analysis of Racialised Crime and Punishment Police Practices and the Demand for Change

Authors

  • Anna Kovar Student of the University of Edinburgh

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2218/ccj.v2.5383

Keywords:

Durkheim, Cult of the Individual, Racialised Policing, Black Lives Matter, 2011 Tottenham Riots

Abstract

The analysis of racialised police attitudes has been frequently addressed in academic articles, but the application of a Neo-Durkheimian approach has been largely overlooked. This article will apply Durkheimian theory to illuminate the need for a shift in crime and punishment policy and practices to avoid the present societal moral stagnation. In order to do so it will address both, the recent Black Lives Matter protests in America and the 2011 Riots in London. The use of the two case studies signifies the continuity of problematic police behaviour and political address. It is evident that such an article is embedded in an extremely sensitive topic, therefore it does not presume to provide a solution to the overwhelming circumstances. Rather, in illuminating the relevance of Durkheimian theory it signifies that current global circumstances demand a moral shift in societal understandings of solidarity and “the cult of the individual”, providing pivotal foundations for police practices. However, this requires participation of criminologists alongside practitioners and activists.

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Published

03-Oct-2021