Creating Consent in an Illiberal Order: Policing Disputes in Jordan
Middle Eastern police forces have a reputation for carrying out repression and surveillance on behalf of authoritarian regimes, despite frequently under enforcing the law. But what is their role in co-creating and sustaining social order? In this book, Jessica Watkins focuses on the development of the Jordanian police institution to demonstrate that rather than being primarily concerned with law enforcement, the police are first and foremost concerned with order. In Jordan, social order combines the influence of longstanding tribal practices with regime efforts to promote neoliberal economic policies alongside a sense of civic duty amongst citizens. Rather than focusing on the 'high policing' of offences deemed to threaten state security, Watkins explores the 'low policing' of interpersonal disputes including assault, theft, murder, traffic accidents, and domestic abuse to shed light on the varied strategies of power deployed by the police alongside other societal actors to procure hegemonic 'consent'.
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Creating Consent in an Illiberal Order: Policing Disputes in Jordan
Middle Eastern police forces have a reputation for carrying out repression and surveillance on behalf of authoritarian regimes, despite frequently under enforcing the law. But what is their role in co-creating and sustaining social order? In this book, Jessica Watkins focuses on the development of the Jordanian police institution to demonstrate that rather than being primarily concerned with law enforcement, the police are first and foremost concerned with order. In Jordan, social order combines the influence of longstanding tribal practices with regime efforts to promote neoliberal economic policies alongside a sense of civic duty amongst citizens. Rather than focusing on the 'high policing' of offences deemed to threaten state security, Watkins explores the 'low policing' of interpersonal disputes including assault, theft, murder, traffic accidents, and domestic abuse to shed light on the varied strategies of power deployed by the police alongside other societal actors to procure hegemonic 'consent'.
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Creating Consent in an Illiberal Order: Policing Disputes in Jordan

Creating Consent in an Illiberal Order: Policing Disputes in Jordan

by Jessica Watkins
Creating Consent in an Illiberal Order: Policing Disputes in Jordan

Creating Consent in an Illiberal Order: Policing Disputes in Jordan

by Jessica Watkins

Hardcover

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Overview

Middle Eastern police forces have a reputation for carrying out repression and surveillance on behalf of authoritarian regimes, despite frequently under enforcing the law. But what is their role in co-creating and sustaining social order? In this book, Jessica Watkins focuses on the development of the Jordanian police institution to demonstrate that rather than being primarily concerned with law enforcement, the police are first and foremost concerned with order. In Jordan, social order combines the influence of longstanding tribal practices with regime efforts to promote neoliberal economic policies alongside a sense of civic duty amongst citizens. Rather than focusing on the 'high policing' of offences deemed to threaten state security, Watkins explores the 'low policing' of interpersonal disputes including assault, theft, murder, traffic accidents, and domestic abuse to shed light on the varied strategies of power deployed by the police alongside other societal actors to procure hegemonic 'consent'.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781009098618
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 06/09/2022
Series: Cambridge Middle East Studies
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.79(d)

About the Author

Jessica Watkins is a Research Associate at the German Institute for Global and Area Studies and a Visiting Fellow at the Middle East Centre, London School of Economics. In 2015, she won the Elsevier outstanding thesis award and was runner-up for the Leigh Douglas Memorial Prize for best PhD dissertation on the Middle East. She previously worked in Iraq as a civilian translator with British forces and Iraqi police.

Table of Contents

Preface; 1. Introduction; 2. Strategic alliances and amalgamated social orders: the basis of authoritarian survival; 3. State policing from the Ottoman gendarmerie to the public security directorate; 4. Criminalising disputes, disputing criminality: police and legal pluralism; 5. Policing blood crimes in the (neo)tribal tradition; 6. Policing domestic abuse: police and women's rights groups; 7. Community policing after the uprisings: refugees and representatives; 8. From neoliberal securitised policing back to the disputing process.
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