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OverviewCalls to defund the police or to stop brutal police violence, argue Mark Maguire and Setha Low, will never succeed as long as there are those who enjoy and take comfort in security capitalism. Security capitalism can be recognized by the marks it leaves on society, remaking public space in its own image-privatized, fortified, unequal, striated, and access-controlled. With a global and comparative lens that takes readers from Nairobi to New York City, Maguire and Low offer intimate portraits of the people behind security capitalism-the police, policy makers, and private contractors who agree that a price must be paid in blood to maintain public safety-and critique phenomena like the transfer of public funds to arms dealers via the militarization of police, securitized housing developments, and ineffectual counterterrorism efforts. But more than just an expose of the nefarious corporations, corrupt agencies, and incompetent governments, this book uniquely shines the spotlight on the ordinary citizens whose desires for safety drive these phenomena. Angela Davis has written of the challenge of persuading people that ""safety, safeguarded by violence, is not really safety."" Maguire and Low aid us in thinking through the challenge, providing a common language to discuss security capitalism and offering ways to escape its clutches. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Mark Maguire , Setha LowPublisher: Stanford University Press Imprint: Stanford Briefs ISBN: 9781503632967ISBN 10: 1503632962 Pages: 182 Publication Date: 19 March 2024 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsReviews"""As the US and the world experience growing threats derived from high levels of inequality and the related issues of emergent diseases and climate change, we have seen an increase in emphasis on producing security in ways that actually heighten the problem. This well-written and engaging book does an excellent job of analyzing these dynamics and offering an agenda for addressing them.""—Alex Vitale, author of The End of Policing ""Mark Maguire and Setha Low have crafted an accessible and engaging book about how to escape the gated worldviews that have infiltrated everyday life. Highly recommended.""—Reece Jones, author of Nobody Is Protected: How the Border Patrol Became the Most Dangerous Police Force in the United States ""While there have been many ethnographic investigations of specific dimensions of security in particular sites around the world, this compelling, concise, and very teachable text draws on comparative ethnographic cases from around the world to provide a more holistic view of the subject. Trapped offers readers a narrative-driven study of how security traverses a range of social institutions and spatial domains to become, as Low and Maguire describe it, ""everywhere."" Trapped shows us how security—and its mechanisms of fear, violence, and isolation—works through society across vertical and horizontal scales and shapes our public worlds as well as our interior selves.""—Kristin Monroe, author of The Insecure City: Space, Mobility, and Power ""People all over the world are gnawed by chronic feelings of insecurity. The dominant response to these feelings is to build more and more walls, cages, and intrusive forms of surveillance. Trapped is a brilliant anatomy of these destructive policies. In their accessible and ambitious book, Maguire and Low survey the state of what they call security capitalism. Through a series of fine-grained, globe-straddling ethnographic studies of life under security capitalism, they take readers inside gated middle-class residential enclaves and elite urban developments in the US, track the career of an Irish cop from community policing to anti-terror consulting, and discuss the airport as a laboratory for new security policies and technologies. Trapped offers an incisive critique of security capitalism, showing how permeable these various walls are, how securitization is driven by racialized fearmongering that undermines efforts to build inclusive public space, and what alternatives societies can construct to escape self-built cages.""—Ashley Dawson, author of People's Power: Reclaiming the Energy Commons" Author InformationMark Maguire is Professor of Anthropology at Maynooth University. He is the co-author of Getting through Security: Counterterrorism, Bureaucracy, and a Sense of the Modern.Setha Low is Distinguished Professor of Environmental Psychology, Geography, Anthropology, and Women's Studies at the Graduate Center, City University of New York. She is the author of many books, most recently Why Public Space Matters. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |