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The Exceptional Prison

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Type

Article

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Authors

Bueno, Samira 
Denyer Willis, GAN 

Abstract

Between 2013 and 2016, police in one Brazilian city killed 3,287 people -66.5% of whom were black. It might not seem surprising, then, that this place is also one of the only in the world that has a prison just for police. But this prison is exceptional, a ‘model’ place as those who run it say. It isn’t 'dungeon-like' or a ‘warehouse of black lives’ as scholars argue of prisons in this country and elsewhere. Around the apiary, a tilapia pond, and groves of citrus trees, few police are here because they killed on the job. Using ethnography from in and outside this prison, we examine narratives of socialisation, redemption, and discussions of mundane and exceptional killing, to illustrate what operates beneath the public veneer of the punishment of police. This lays bare a set of key assumptions about the function of policing, and the possibility of reform amidst capitalism, in a vital moment of global political rupture. To speak of impunity for police violence, or of iterative gains in reform, is to dramatically misunderstand the work of policing.

Description

Keywords

4407 Policy and Administration, 4402 Criminology, 44 Human Society, 16 Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions

Journal Title

Public Culture

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1527-8018
1527-8018

Volume Title

31

Publisher

Duke University Press