Dialogues For Change
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O.4 — The Dangerous Classes: How Victorian Britain Invented an Internal Enemy (Part 1)
Discover how Victorian Britain used the myth of “dangerous classes” to justify new policing, surveillance, and…
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PRACTITIONER BRIEF 0.3 — The Racial Infrastructure of Policing
Racial disproportionality in British policing is not produced primarily by individual prejudice, but by frameworks, that…
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O.3 — The Racial Infrastructure of Policing: Empire’s Logic at Home (Part 7)
The afterlife of empire is not a metaphor, it’s the organising logic of modern British policing
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O.3 — The Racial Infrastructure of Policing: Empire’s Logic at Home (Part 6)
How the governing logic of British policing has remained structurally consistent across time — even if…
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O.3 — The Racial Infrastructure of Policing: Empire’s Logic at Home (Part 5)
The history of racialised policing in Britain is not only a history of harm imposed and…
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O.3 — The Racial Infrastructure of Policing: Empire’s Logic at Home (Part 4)
Racialised policing is not accidental. It is the afterlife of empire, built into systems, categories, and…
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O.3 — The Racial Infrastructure of Policing: Empire’s Logic at Home (Part 3)
Race was not incidental to British policing, it was architectural — built into the frameworks, categories,…
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O.3 — The Racial Infrastructure of Policing: Empire’s Logic at Home (Part 2)
When large-scale migration, primarily from the Caribbean, South Asia, and Africa began after the Second World…
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O.3 — The Racial Infrastructure of Policing: Empire’s Logic at Home (Part 1)
From ‘criminal tribes’ to ‘high risk communities,’ racial tropes built in empire still shape policing today
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PRACTITIONER BRIEF 0.2 — The Imperial Boomerang
The techniques that define British policing today — pre-emptive intervention, population surveillance, group-based suspicion, public order…
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O.2 — The Imperial Boomerang: How Overseas Tactics Came Home (Part 6)
Colonial policing methods—suspicion, control, racialised risk—became British policing traditions and persist in modern policing.”
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O.2 — The Imperial Boomerang: How Overseas Tactics Came Home (Part 5)
Empire taught the British state to associate danger with certain bodies and communities and to read…