Negotiating demands : the politics of skid row policing in Edinburgh, San Francisco, and Vancouver

Title
  1. Negotiating demands : the politics of skid row policing in Edinburgh, San Francisco, and Vancouver / Laura Huey.
Published by
  1. Toronto ; Buffalo : University of Toronto Press, [2007], ©2007.
Author
  1. Huey, Laura.

Items in the library and off-site

Filter by

Displaying all 2 items

StatusFormatAccessCall numberItem location
StatusFormatTextAccessRequest in advanceCall numberHV7936.P8 H84 2007Item locationOff-site
Status

Not available - Please for assistance.

FormatTextAccessUse in libraryCall numberItem locationOff-site

Details

Description
  1. 253 pages : illustrations; 23 cm
Summary
  1. "The relationship between policing and the governance of society is an important and complex one, especially as it relates to destitute areas. Through a comparative analysis of policing in skid row districts in three cities - Edinburgh, San Francisco, and Vancouver - Negotiating Demands offers an inside look at the influence of local political, moral, and economic issues on police practices within marginalized communities." "Through an analysis of various theoretical approaches and ethnographic field data, Laura Huey unveils a portrait of skid row policing as a political process. Police are regularly called upon to negotiate often-conflicting sets of demands, especially within the context of disadvantaged or troubled neighbourhoods. Examining a broad spectrum of police procedures and community responses, Huey offers a reconceptualization of the police as political actors who 'negotiate demands' of different constituencies. How the police meet these demands - through incident - and context-specific uses of law enforcement, peacekeeping, social work, and knowledge work - are shown to be a product of the civic environment in which they operate and of the 'moral-economic' forces that shape public discourse." "Negotiating Demands is an original study that not only advances our knowledge of police organization and decision-making strategies but also refines our understanding of how processes of social inclusion and exclusion occur in different liberal regimes and how they can be addressed."--BOOK JACKET.
Subject
  1. Marginalité > Études transculturelles
  2. Police-community relations > Cross-cultural studies
  3. Quartiers de clochards > Études transculturelles
  4. Police communautaire > Colombie-Britannique > Vancouver
  5. Police communautaire > Écosse > Édimbourg
  6. Skid row > Cross-cultural studies
  7. Relations police-collectivité > Études transculturelles
  8. Law enforcement > Political aspects > Cross-cultural studies
  9. Lois > Application > Aspect politique > Études transculturelles
  10. Marginality, Social > Cross-cultural studies
  11. Police communautaire > Californie > San Francisco
Contents
  1. Introduction : shooting up on Adam Smith's grave -- 1. Inclusion, exclusion, and the policing of the skids -- 2. Alkies, smackheads, and Ordos : skid row under ordoliberalism -- 3. Community policing and knowledge work -- 4. Junkies, drunks, and the American dream : neo-liberal skid row -- 5. Enforcing the law with broken windows -- 6. Crazies, crack addicts, and the 'middle way' -- 7. Peacekeeping through saturation -- 8. Policing as the art of negotiating demands -- 9. 'A community gets the policing that it wants'.
Owning institution
  1. Columbia University Libraries
Bibliography (note)
  1. Includes bibliographical references (p. [231]-246) and index.