The Resort to Emergency Policing to Control Gang Violence in Jamaica: Making the Exception the Rule

Yonique Campbell, Anthony Harriott
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Abstract

This article critically examines reasons for the persistent use of states of emergency (SOEs) as a tool of crime control in Jamaica and risks associated with normalising these measures in small, low-capacity, competitive democracies in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC). We attend to the question of permanent SOEs as an issue of law and certain policing methods becoming normalised. This differs from scholars who think about the use of permanent SOEs as suspension of law or executive rule and make a clear distinction between law and violence and normalcy and emergency. Our findings show that persistent usage of SOEs in Jamaica reflects the incapacity of the state to control violent crime as well as its effort to strengthen its coercive capabilities and compensate for the ineffectiveness of the police. It is also a response to public demand for SOE policing. State strengthening is a necessary condition for a more peaceful and law-abiding society but is also a carrier of risks of democratic degeneration via rights-disregarding policing. Nonetheless, we have seen authoritarian management of crime without descent into authoritarianism, in general, and strong boundary-marking and patrolling by some state-oversight institutions that enjoy the support of civil society.
牙买加诉诸紧急警务控制帮派暴力:将例外变成规则
本文批判性地探讨了牙买加持续使用紧急状态(SOEs)作为控制犯罪工具的原因,以及在拉丁美洲和加勒比地区(LAC)小规模、低能力、有竞争力的民主国家将这些措施常态化的相关风险。我们将永久性国有企业问题视为法律问题和某些警务方法常态化的问题。这有别于将使用永久性国有企业视为中止法律或行政统治的学者,也不同于将法律与暴力、正常与紧急明确区分开来的学者。我们的研究结果表明,牙买加持续使用国有企业反映出国家无力控制暴力犯罪,同时也反映出国家在努力加强其强制能力,弥补警察的无效性。这也是对公众要求国有企业维持治安的回应。加强国家是建立一个更加和平、守法的社会的必要条件,但同时也是无视权利的警务工作导致民主退化的风险载体。尽管如此,我们还是看到了对犯罪的专制管理,但总体上并没有沦为专制主义,一些得到民间社会支持的国家监督机构进行了强有力的划界和巡逻。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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