Springfield News-Sun

Policing in this country degrades, shapes the citizenshi­p of millions

- Jamelle Bouie Jamelle Bouie is a columnist for The New York Times.

I recently wrote that American policing lies largely outside of democratic control. In practice, despite the formal authority of mayors, city councilors and other elected officials, police department­s can and do operate without meaningful accountabi­lity or public oversight.

But the problem of democracy and policing goes beyond questions of accountabi­lity. The police shape the experience of American democracy as much (or as little) as they are shaped by it. Police department­s, as much as any other institutio­n, mediate and define citizenshi­p for millions.

Or, as political scientists Joe Soss and Vesla Weaver argued in 2017 against the backdrop of the

Black Lives Matter movement, “Police are our government.” The paper in question is primarily addressed to scholars of American politics, urging them to widen their aperture and turn greater attention to the “activities of governing institutio­ns and officials that exercise social control and encompass various modes of coercion, containmen­t, repression, surveillan­ce, regulation, predation, discipline, and violence,” what they call the “second face of the state.” To that end, Soss and Weaver make valuable observatio­ns about the role that policing plays in modern democratic life.

The middle-class residents of a moderately affluent suburb are likely to experience government in ways that affirm their sense of agency and political belonging, whether at a polling place, their child’s school or a local government office. For poor and low-income Americans, and especially those in segregated, marginaliz­ed communitie­s, the experience of government is so radically different as to challenge our use of the word “government” to refer to both.

Residents of these communitie­s are not treated, Soss and Weaver write, as “citizens facing social barriers or as victims needing protection from slum landlord predation, violence, and misaligned service provision” but instead as potential “criminal targets in need of surveillan­ce.” And while there would be fewer and fewer resources for social investment through the 1990s and into the 2000s, there would always be funds for law enforcemen­t, so much so that state and local government­s began handing previously unrelated tasks to police department­s.

“By the early years of the 21st century,” they note, “police had become a normal presence in sites ranging from mental health agencies to hospital emergency rooms to schools to welfare offices.” What’s more, as policing became the central institutio­n in the social regulation of disadvanta­ged communitie­s, police department­s began to engage in the kinds of actions that call to mind the “urban renewal” of the 1950s and ’60s. “Under the guise of reclaiming spaces from social disorder and promoting urban developmen­t, police advanced the gentrifica­tion of urban neighborho­ods and serviced race- and class-based residentia­l segregatio­n.”

The upshot of all of this is to make the police “one of the most visible and proximate instantiat­ions of state power in many citizens’ lives,” Soss and Weaver write. In fact, as Weaver and political scientist Amy E. Lerman observe in “Arresting Citizenshi­p: The Democratic Consequenc­es of American Crime Control”, there are a host of reasons to think “criminal justice contact rivals other more traditiona­l politicall­y socializin­g experience­s and venues for civic education.”

And unlike other, less punitive (or even positive) interactio­ns with the government, this contact cleaves citizens away from the traditiona­l political community. These “custodial citizens” are then “constitute­d not as participat­ory members of the democratic polity, but as discipline­d subjects of the carceral state.” The result is that “rather than communicat­ing that they are worthy and valued citizens, their experience­s with criminal justice teach them that they have little voice.”

As I have been saying, the American police are largely insulated from democratic control . Much less obvious is the degree to which policing itself shapes, constricts and degrades the citizenshi­p of millions of law-abiding Americans, making a mockery of the idea that they live in a democracy or enjoy anything like political equality.

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