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Police Work and Identity - A South African Ethnography (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,269
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Police Work and Identity - A South African Ethnography (Paperback)
Series: Routledge Studies in Crime, Security and Justice
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This is a book about the men and women who police contemporary
South Africa. Drawing on rich, original ethnographical data, it
considers how officers make sense of their jobs and how they find
meaning in their duties. It demonstrates that the dynamics that
lead to police abuses and scandals in transitional and
neo-liberalising regimes such as South Africa can be traced to the
day-to-day experiences and ambitions of the average police officer.
It is about the stories they tell themselves about themselves and
their social worlds, and how these shape the order they produce
through their work. By focusing on police officers, this book
positions the individual in primacy over the organisation, asking
what policing looks like when motivated by the pursuit of
ontological security in precarious contexts. It acknowledges but
downplays the importance of police culture in determining officers'
attitudes and behaviour, and reminds readers that most officers'
lives are entangled in, and shaped by a range of social, political
and cultural forces. It suggests that a job in the South African
Police Service (SAPS) is primarily just that: a job. Most officers
join the organisation after other dreams have slipped beyond reach,
their presence in the Service being almost accidental. But once
employed, they re-write their self-narratives and enact carefully
choreographed performances to ease managerial and public pressure,
and to rationalize their coercive practices. In an era where
'evidence' and 'what works' reigns supreme, and where 'cop culture'
is often deemed a primary socializing force, this book emphasises
how officers' personal histories, ambitions, and vulnerabilities
remain central to how policing unfolds on the street.
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