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A legal shot? Police Gun Violence and Individual Accountability in Miami

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  • Thijs Jeursen

Abstract

In light of police violence and injustice, criminologists tend to focus on masculine and violent police cultures, the lack of democratic oversight and on social processes of dehumanization. Yet much less attention, however, is given to the objects commonly used in violent and lethal police encounters: guns. Drawing on long-term ethnographic fieldwork with police officers in Miami, I suggest that police officers tend to re-contextualize police gun violence in terms of individual liability and legal culpability—as a question of what constitutes a legal shot. While a legal framing might protect police officers from prosecution, the legal shot first and foremost enables state institutions to explain police brutality as “incidents”: as unintentional and exceptional outcomes of an otherwise warranted form of policing. Recognizing how the legal shot attunes our attention to individual misconduct and legal solutions to systemic and racialized police violence, I suggest, is an important step in exploring the possibilities to disarm the police, and to organize around the question of how to imagine and push for a more inclusive form of public safety.

Suggested Citation

  • Thijs Jeursen, 2022. "A legal shot? Police Gun Violence and Individual Accountability in Miami," The British Journal of Criminology, Centre for Crime and Justice Studies, vol. 62(6), pages 1470-1484.
  • Handle: RePEc:oup:crimin:v:62:y:2022:i:6:p:1470-1484.
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    File URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10.1093/bjc/azab105
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Laurence Ralph, 2019. "The logic of the slave patrol: the fantasy of black predatory violence and the use of force by the police," Palgrave Communications, Palgrave Macmillan, vol. 5(1), pages 1-10, December.
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      policing; violence; legality; guns; Miami;
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