Dying to survive: Ransom piracy and ontologies of death in Coastal Somalia

IF 1.5 Q2 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
Brittany Gilmer, Susan Dewey
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Interactions between long-term hostages and hostage takers remain undertheorized in criminology, and the present study attempts to fill this gap by utilizing testimonials from long-term hostages held aboard ships. We argue that seafarer hostages’ testimonials depict hijacked vessels as carceral sites that reflect and reproduce the global economic inequalities and racialized patterns of violence undergirding the broader geopolitics of piracy. Utilizing a threefold theoretical framework that unites and builds upon narrative inquiry, narrative criminology and victimology, and thanatopolitics, our analytical energies focus on the centrality of ontologies of death in hostages’ accounts of being held for ransom aboard ships. Our findings emphasize how ontologies of death evident in ransom piracy hostages’ accounts represent the hostage experience as encompassing different states of death, with hostages describing death as a real and ever-present threat that variously encompasses a psychological state of survival, a dehumanizing force, and a disciplinary tactic.
为生存而死:索马里沿海的赎金海盗行为和死亡本体论
在犯罪学中,长期人质和劫持者之间的相互作用仍然缺乏理论依据,本研究试图通过利用船上长期人质的证词来填补这一空白。我们认为,海员人质的证词将被劫持的船只描述为暴力场所,反映和再现了全球经济不平等和种族化的暴力模式,这些模式是海盗行为更广泛的地缘政治基础。利用统一并建立在叙事探究、叙事犯罪学和受害者学以及死亡政治学基础上的三重理论框架,我们的分析精力集中在人质被劫持勒索赎金的叙述中死亡本体论的中心地位。我们的研究结果强调了在海盗勒索人质的描述中,死亡本体是如何将人质经历描述为包含不同死亡状态的,人质将死亡描述为一种真实且永远存在的威胁,包括生存的心理状态、非人性化的力量和纪律策略。
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来源期刊
International Review of Victimology
International Review of Victimology CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY-
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
13.30%
发文量
30
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