暴力与正义的边界:墨西哥人、墨西哥裔美国人和西南部的执法,1835-1935 年》,Brian D. Behnken 著(评论)

IF 0.2 3区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY
Tim Bowman
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Illustrations, notes, bibliography, index.) <p>Brian Behnken's <em>Borders of Violence and Justice</em> is an examination of ethnic Mexicans' relationships to \"formal and informal law enforcement\"—municipal and state police forces, mobs, and the U.S. federal government—from 1835 to 1935. (p. 2) Most importantly, Behnken emphasizes ethnic Mexican people's historical agency to show how resistance and advocacy existed in multiple, and sometimes unexpected, ways.</p> <p>Behnken begins by surveying ethnic Mexicans' relationships with law enforcement around the time of the U.S. conquest of the Southwest in the 1840s. Informal citizens patrols dominated nonwhites in various Southwestern cities; some lynch mobs, like in the cities of Houston, Santa Fe, and Los Angeles, actually became municipal police forces over time. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 暴力与正义的边界:Borders of Violence and Justice:墨西哥人、墨西哥裔美国人和西南部的执法部门,1835-1935 年。作者:Brian D. Behnken。(Chapel Hill:北卡罗来纳大学出版社,2022 年。Pp.334.插图、注释、参考书目、索引)。布莱恩-贝恩肯(Brian Behnken)的《暴力与正义的边界》研究了 1835 年至 1935 年墨西哥裔与 "正式和非正式执法部门"--市和州警察部队、暴民以及美国联邦政府--的关系。(第 2 页)最重要的是,贝恩肯强调墨西哥裔人的历史能动性,展示了他们如何以多种方式,有时甚至是意想不到的方式进行反抗和宣传。贝恩肯首先调查了 19 世纪 40 年代美国征服西南部前后墨西哥裔与执法部门的关系。非正规的市民巡逻队在西南部各城市统治着非白人;一些私刑暴民,如休斯顿、圣达菲和洛杉矶等城市的私刑暴民,随着时间的推移实际上变成了市政警察部队。贝恩肯还展示了墨西哥裔人如何通过新墨西哥州的《卡尼法典》和加利福尼亚州的《斯托克顿公告》等机制抵制执法和政府权力的正规化,从而揭露了当地人在美墨战争的紧张岁月里与美军合作的神话。在第二章中,贝恩肯分析了十九世纪治安维持会这一相对成熟的领域。有趣的是,贝恩肯利用拉蒙-科尔多瓦(Ramon Cordova)被捕后被马里科帕县的私刑暴徒绞死,后被验尸官法庭认定有罪的故事,来打破美国西南部司法系统失败的神话。下一章讲述了 19 世纪末和 20 世纪初墨西哥和墨西哥裔美国执法官员的精彩故事,认为他们的集体服务 "展示了墨西哥原住民为法律和秩序而战的方式之一",尽管他们在 1848 年后的几十年中被普遍剥夺了权利。(第 96 页)鉴于司法系统倾向于将天生的犯罪性归咎于墨西哥后裔,以及公众倾向于看到边境地区 "到处都是土匪",墨西哥裔执法人员或许尤其值得注意,后者在 20 世纪初的德克萨斯州边境地区是一个特别尖锐的问题。(第 147 页)最后,Behnken 在第六章中令人信服地证明,尽管许多形式的反墨西哥警察暴力延续到了现代,但警务改革的压力--或许最突出的是众议员 J. T. Canales 在 1919 年对德克萨斯巡警进行了著名的立法调查之后--以积极的方式帮助整个西南地区实现了警务现代化。正义与暴力的边界》充满了宝贵的见解。同样,最重要的是,贝恩肯提出了一个复杂而多层次的叙事,有效地展示了在盎格鲁人征服墨西哥之后,墨 [完 第 357 页] 墨西哥人在警务和执法方面所采取的多种不同方法。贝恩肯成功的一个关键因素是该书的可读性--《正义与暴力的边界》为警务史学提供了重要的见解,同时又不失叙事风格,显然能吸引非专业读者。我们强烈推荐本书给研究边境地区、警务和墨西哥-美国历史的学者。蒂姆-鲍曼(Tim Bowman)西得克萨斯 A&M 大学版权所有 © 2022 年得克萨斯州历史协会 ...
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Borders of Violence and Justice: Mexicans, Mexican Americans, and Law Enforcement in the Southwest, 1835–1935 by Brian D. Behnken (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Borders of Violence and Justice: Mexicans, Mexican Americans, and Law Enforcement in the Southwest, 1835–1935 by Brian D. Behnken
  • Tim Bowman
Borders of Violence and Justice: Mexicans, Mexican Americans, and Law Enforcement in the Southwest, 1835–1935. By Brian D. Behnken. ( Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2022. Pp. 334. Illustrations, notes, bibliography, index.)

Brian Behnken's Borders of Violence and Justice is an examination of ethnic Mexicans' relationships to "formal and informal law enforcement"—municipal and state police forces, mobs, and the U.S. federal government—from 1835 to 1935. (p. 2) Most importantly, Behnken emphasizes ethnic Mexican people's historical agency to show how resistance and advocacy existed in multiple, and sometimes unexpected, ways.

Behnken begins by surveying ethnic Mexicans' relationships with law enforcement around the time of the U.S. conquest of the Southwest in the 1840s. Informal citizens patrols dominated nonwhites in various Southwestern cities; some lynch mobs, like in the cities of Houston, Santa Fe, and Los Angeles, actually became municipal police forces over time. Behnken also shows how ethnic Mexicans resisted the formalization of law enforcement and governmental authority through mechanisms like the Kearny Code in New Mexico and Stockton proclamation in California, thus exposing the myth of locals' cooperation with the U.S. military during the tense years of the U.S.-Mexico War. In Chapter Two, Behnken analyzes the relatively well-trod ground of nineteenth century vigilantism. Interestingly, Behnken uses stories such as that of Ramon Cordova, who was hanged by a Maricopa County lynch mob after his arrest and found guilty posthumously by a coroner's court, to dispel the myth of a failed U.S. justice system in the Southwest. The next chapter narrates the fascinating stories of Mexican and Mexican-American law enforcement officials in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, arguing that their collective service "demonstrates one of the ways Mexican-origin people fought for law and order" despite their general dispossession in the decades following 1848. (p. 96) Ethnic Mexican law enforcement is perhaps particularly noteworthy given the justice system's propensity to ascribe an innate criminality to people of Mexican descent, and for the public's propensity to see "bandits everywhere" across the borderlands, the latter an especially acute problem in the early twentieth century Texas borderland. (p. 147) Finally, Behnken convincingly demonstrates in Chapter Six that pressures to reform policing—perhaps most prominently in the wake of Representative J. T. Canales's famous legislative investigations of the Texas Rangers in 1919—helped modernize policing in positive ways across the Southwest, despite the continuation of many forms of anti-Mexican police violence into the modern period.

Borders of Justice and Violence is filled with valuable insights. Again, most importantly Behnken presents a complicated and multilayered narrative that effectively demonstrates the many different approaches that ethnic [End Page 357] Mexicans took toward policing and law enforcement in the wake of Anglo conquest. A crucial component to Behnken's success is the book's readability—Borders of Justice and Violence contributes significant insights to the historiography on policing without sacrificing a narrative voice that will clearly appeal to a lay audience. This book is highly recommended to scholars in the fields of borderlands, policing, and Mexican-American histories.

Tim Bowman West Texas A&M University Copyright © 2022 The Texas State Historical Association ...

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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
106
期刊介绍: The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, continuously published since 1897, is the premier source of scholarly information about the history of Texas and the Southwest. The first 100 volumes of the Quarterly, more than 57,000 pages, are now available Online with searchable Tables of Contents.
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