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War language is used by transnational police when describing their work

Barbed wire over fence. Photo: Erika Wittlieb.

Even though much of their time is spent in less dramatic situations, transnational police from a range of different counties describe their own work in terms of fighting and combat.

David Sausdal, Associate Senior Lecturer at the Department of Sociology, has spent six years ethnographically researching transnational policing efforts at both the national and international level across Europe. He has now published the article: A fighting fetish: On transnational police and their warlike presentation of self.

Article abstract:

Transnational police readily use martial language in the stories they tell about their work. Their actual work, however, tells a different and less dramatic story.

Why, then, do they insist on these warlike tales? Why is there a discrepancy between the self-representation of transnational policing and its reality? Using an ethnographic study, this article provides some answers. First, it includes an overview of three established explanations of the inclination of transnational police to represent their work in warlike terms.

Next, an additional reading is presented. Building on Reiner’s discussion of “police fetishism”, this reading proposes that transnational policing actors have an idée fixe about their own professional inevitability. They blindly believe that policing must exist, but also that it has to be done combatively to truly work.

In conclusion, the article contemplates what the existence of such a “fighting fetish” means in both theoretical and reform terms.

Read the whole article "A fighting fetish: On transnational police and their warlike presentation of self" on journals.sagepub.com

Learn more about David Sausdals research on his personal page soc.lu.se/en/david-sausdal