警察团伙:Facebook,法外杀戮和内罗毕东区超级警察赫西的流行想象

Politeia Pub Date : 2022-06-01 DOI:10.25159/2663-6689/10609
D. Omanga, Pamela C. Mainye, Erick Juma Kashara
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引用次数: 1

摘要

警察和帮派很少成为流行文化形式的重要场所,尤其是在非洲。作为一个机构,肯尼亚的警察是晦涩难懂的,不透明的,经常被视为反对社会,而不是为社会服务。流行文化不仅是一个窗口,让我们窥见社会主流的“看”方式,也是社会阐明潜在争议话题的一种方式。在肯尼亚内罗毕的伊斯特兰兹,警察杀害了嫌疑帮派成员,这一事件引发了巨大的争议。关于内罗毕犯罪的新闻报道,借鉴了新闻采编惯例和新闻价值观,即对特定经历给予特权,而对其他经历予以排斥,用特定的“单一叙述”来框定帮派暴力。然而,Facebook在内罗毕东部地区的使用提供了一个独特的画布,通过这个画布,“超级警察”的想象被赋予了多重含义,如果不是相互冲突的话。“超级警察”描述了一种非正统的警务形式,即特定的警察(大多是男性),通过公众同意和国家批准的混合,特别是在内罗毕的东区,使用法外手段对抗可疑的暴力团伙。这篇论文揭示了Facebook群组在东部地区的话语是如何提供了一种视角,以一种从肯尼亚冲突的城市历史到管理城市暴力团伙的方式,传播所谓的“超级警察”的另一种(如果不是同样有争议的)解读。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Policing Gangs: Facebook, Extra-judicial Killings and Popular Imaginaries of Super-cop Hessy in Eastlands, Nairobi
Police and gangs have rarely featured as important loci of popular cultural forms, especially in Africa. As an institution, the police in Kenya are abstruse, opaque and often seen as against, and not for society. Popular culture is not only a window and a peek into how a society mainstreams ways of “looking” but also a way through which society articulates potentially controversial subjects. Nothing comes close to the controversy surrounding the subject of police killings of suspected gang members in Eastlands, Nairobi, Kenya. News reports on crime in Nairobi, drawing from news-gathering routines and news values that privilege specific experiences while excluding others, have framed gang violence in specific “singular narratives.” However, Facebook use in Eastlands Nairobi provides a unique canvas through which the imaginary of a “super-cop” is given multiple, if not conflicting meanings. “Super-cops” describe an unorthodox form of policing where specific policemen (mostly male), through a mix of public consent and state sanction, particularly in Eastlands, Nairobi, use extrajudicial means to confront suspected violent gangs. This paper reveals how Facebook groups’ discourse in Eastlands provides lenses that circulate alternative, if not equally controversial readings of so-called “super-cops” in ways that draw from Kenya’s conflicted urban histories to managing violent gangs in the city.
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