The Logistics of Police Power: Armored Vehicles, Colonial Boomerangs, and Strategies of Circulation

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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The Logistics of Police Power : Armored Vehicles, Colonial Boomerangs, and Strategies of Circulation. / Denman, Derek Scott.

In: Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, Vol. 38, No. 6, 2020, p. 1138-1156.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Denman, DS 2020, 'The Logistics of Police Power: Armored Vehicles, Colonial Boomerangs, and Strategies of Circulation', Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, vol. 38, no. 6, pp. 1138-1156. https://doi.org/10.1177/0263775820929698

APA

Denman, D. S. (2020). The Logistics of Police Power: Armored Vehicles, Colonial Boomerangs, and Strategies of Circulation. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 38(6), 1138-1156. https://doi.org/10.1177/0263775820929698

Vancouver

Denman DS. The Logistics of Police Power: Armored Vehicles, Colonial Boomerangs, and Strategies of Circulation. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space. 2020;38(6):1138-1156. https://doi.org/10.1177/0263775820929698

Author

Denman, Derek Scott. / The Logistics of Police Power : Armored Vehicles, Colonial Boomerangs, and Strategies of Circulation. In: Environment and Planning D: Society and Space. 2020 ; Vol. 38, No. 6. pp. 1138-1156.

Bibtex

@article{6c3639f21abc44bda1736c1c80913cfa,
title = "The Logistics of Police Power: Armored Vehicles, Colonial Boomerangs, and Strategies of Circulation",
abstract = "Images of police armored vehicles in Ferguson and Baltimore have been influential in a public conversation about the militarization of the police. However, recent critical and abolitionist work on policing rejects the concept of “militarization” for obscuring the longstanding histories and institutional connections between military and police apparatuses. By following the transfers of armored vehicles to police, this article illuminates the logistical pathways that connect colonial warfare and domestic policing, adding an account of the material composition of police power to the historical work of critical and abolitionist thinkers. The article proceeds through a critical reading of records of the Defense Logistics Agency, tracking the transfer of surplus armored vehicles to the police. Designated as “high-visibility property” by the Defense Logistics Agency, these vehicles testify to the materiality of police power. The article then tracks the visibility and materiality of these vehicles as they are deployed in urban and suburban spaces and considers their unique capacity to suppress the democratic energies of crowds. Tracking the armored vehicle provides a way to ask how the rigid lines of fortified urban space are organized into mobile vectors and where ongoing processes of colonization enter these spatial processes.",
author = "Denman, {Derek Scott}",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1177/0263775820929698",
language = "English",
volume = "38",
pages = "1138--1156",
journal = "Environment and Planning D: Society and Space",
issn = "0263-7758",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Logistics of Police Power

T2 - Armored Vehicles, Colonial Boomerangs, and Strategies of Circulation

AU - Denman, Derek Scott

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Images of police armored vehicles in Ferguson and Baltimore have been influential in a public conversation about the militarization of the police. However, recent critical and abolitionist work on policing rejects the concept of “militarization” for obscuring the longstanding histories and institutional connections between military and police apparatuses. By following the transfers of armored vehicles to police, this article illuminates the logistical pathways that connect colonial warfare and domestic policing, adding an account of the material composition of police power to the historical work of critical and abolitionist thinkers. The article proceeds through a critical reading of records of the Defense Logistics Agency, tracking the transfer of surplus armored vehicles to the police. Designated as “high-visibility property” by the Defense Logistics Agency, these vehicles testify to the materiality of police power. The article then tracks the visibility and materiality of these vehicles as they are deployed in urban and suburban spaces and considers their unique capacity to suppress the democratic energies of crowds. Tracking the armored vehicle provides a way to ask how the rigid lines of fortified urban space are organized into mobile vectors and where ongoing processes of colonization enter these spatial processes.

AB - Images of police armored vehicles in Ferguson and Baltimore have been influential in a public conversation about the militarization of the police. However, recent critical and abolitionist work on policing rejects the concept of “militarization” for obscuring the longstanding histories and institutional connections between military and police apparatuses. By following the transfers of armored vehicles to police, this article illuminates the logistical pathways that connect colonial warfare and domestic policing, adding an account of the material composition of police power to the historical work of critical and abolitionist thinkers. The article proceeds through a critical reading of records of the Defense Logistics Agency, tracking the transfer of surplus armored vehicles to the police. Designated as “high-visibility property” by the Defense Logistics Agency, these vehicles testify to the materiality of police power. The article then tracks the visibility and materiality of these vehicles as they are deployed in urban and suburban spaces and considers their unique capacity to suppress the democratic energies of crowds. Tracking the armored vehicle provides a way to ask how the rigid lines of fortified urban space are organized into mobile vectors and where ongoing processes of colonization enter these spatial processes.

U2 - 10.1177/0263775820929698

DO - 10.1177/0263775820929698

M3 - Journal article

VL - 38

SP - 1138

EP - 1156

JO - Environment and Planning D: Society and Space

JF - Environment and Planning D: Society and Space

SN - 0263-7758

IS - 6

ER -

ID: 244048278