Policing in a capitalist economy is run on both state and
private levels. Much existing literature on private policing
assumes that the private sector is oriented almost exclusively
towards loss prevention, and does not fulfil a crime-control
function. In this carefully researched study, George Rigakos
considers the increasingly important role of the 'parapolice' in
the maintenance of social order. He argues that for-profit policing
companies adopt many of the tactics and functions of the public
police, and are less distinguishable from the latter than has been
previously assumed in the criminological literature.
Rigakos conducted a detailed ethnographic and statistical case
study of Intelligarde International - a well-known Canadian
security firm - and uses his results to investigate the following:
How are discipline and surveillance achieved organizationally and
commodified as 'product'? How do security agents themselves, and
those they police, resist social control?
This work offers wide-ranging theoretical implications, drawing
on Foucauldian concepts such as risk, surveillance, and
governmentality, and on Marxian formulations of commodity and
aesthetic production. The first criminological ethnography of a
contract security firm in Canada, this book will be of interest to
criminologists, sociologists, lawyers, and policy-makers and to any
non-academic reader with an interest in the experience of those
employed in the parapolice.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!