This edited volume analyses the global making of security institutions and practices in our postcolonial world.
Jana Hönke is a Visiting Professor at the Conflict Research Centre, Universität Marburg, Germany, and, subsequently, Assistant Professor and Rosalind-Franklin Fellow at the University of Groningen, the Netherlands.
Markus-Michael Müller is an Assistant Professor at the ZI Lateinamerika-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany.
Chapter 1: The Global Making of Policing
[Jana Hönke and Markus-Michael Müller]
THE POST-COLONY AS A LABORATORY
Chapter 2: Capillaries of Empire: Colonial Pacification and the Origins of U.S. Global Surveillance
[Alfred W. McCoy]
Chapter 3: Laboratories of Pacification and Permanent War: Israeli-U.S. Collaboration in the Global Making of Policing
[Stephen Graham and Alex Baker]
Chapter 4: Beyond the Laboratory Thesis: Gaza as Transmission Belt for War and Security Technology
[Leila Stockmarr]
SOUTH-SOUTH POLICING ENCOUNTERS
Chapter 5: Entangled Pacifications: Peacekeeping, Counterinsurgency and Policing in Port-au-Prince and Rio de Janeiro
[Markus-Michael Müller]
Chapter 6: Associated Dependent Security Cooperation: Colombia and the United States
Arlene Tickner
POSTCOLONIAL TRANSNATIONAL SECURITY FIELDS
Chapter 7: Securing the Diaspora: Policing Global Order
[Mark Laffey and Sutharan Nadarajah]
Chapter 8: 'British Cop or International Cop?' Global Makings of International Policing Assistance, 2000-2014
[Georgina Sinclair]
Chapter 9: A Translational Perspective on Police-building in Afghanistan: The Enactment of 'Progress' in the Implementation Gap
[Lars Ostermeier]
CONCLUSION
Chapter 10: Unpacking 'the Global'
[Pinar Bilgin]