64 research outputs found
Just Police Violence: Liberal ideology and the critique of violence from Walter Benjamin to Black Lives Matter
Policing is broadly legitimate – even while imperfect and in need of reform. This axiom of liberal political theory and practice is shaken by movements like Black Lives Matter, which confront and expose carceral violence as the routine, deadly edge of racial capitalism. Thinking with abolitionist currents within these movements, this paper engages critical theory to unpick the ideological discourses that legitimise police violence in ‘real existing liberalism’. I argue that justifications of policing replicate the ‘analytic atomism’ and mythologisation of law that Neu’s Just Liberal Violence identifies in defences of sweatshops, torture, and war. I bring together Benjamin’s classic excavation of sovereign power in the policing function with the experiences of today’s policed subjects to reveal the limitations of liberal appeals to ‘the rule of law’. The standard figuration of oppressive violence as exceptional, deviant, and unlawful, I argue, serves to legitimise the institutions in and through which that violence is normalised
Review of 'The Political Is Political: Conformity and the Illusion of Dissent in Contemporary Political Philosophy' by Lorna Finlayson.
Feminism Against Crime Control: On Sexual Subordination and State Apologism
Its critics call it ‘feminism-as-crime-control’, or ‘Governance Feminism’, diagnosing it as a pernicious form of identity politics. Its advocates call it taking sexual violence seriously – by which they mean wielding the power of the state to ‘punish perpetrators’ and ‘protect vulnerable women’. Both sides agree that this approach follows from the radical feminist analysis of sexual violence most strikingly formulated by Catharine MacKinnon. The aim of this paper is to rethink the Governance Feminism debate by questioning this common presupposition. I ask whether taking MacKinnon’s analysis of sexual violence seriously might, in fact, itself give us reason to be critical of political strategies that embrace the punitive state. By raising this question, I hope to persuade radical feminists to listen to critics of carceral politics rather than dismissing them as rape apologists, and critics of carceral politics to listen to radical feminists rather than dismissing them as state apologists
Author Q and A with editor Phil Crockett Thomas and contributors on abolition science fiction
In this author Q&A, Rémy-Paulin Twahirwa speaks to editor Phil Crockett Thomas and contributors about their recent collection, Abolition Science Fiction, a collection of short science fiction stories written by activists and scholars involved in prison abolition and transformative justice in the UK
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The criminal is political: real existing liberalism and the construction of the criminal
The familiar irony of ‘real existing socialism’ is that it never was. Socialist ideals were used to legitimise regimes that fell far short of realising those ideals – indeed, that violently repressed anyone who tried to realise them. This thesis investigates how the derogatory and depoliticizing concept of the criminal has historically allowed, and continues to allow, liberal ideals to operate in a worryingly similar manner. Across the political spectrum, ‘criminal’ is used as a slur. That which is criminal is assumed to be bad, and what is more, to be bad in a way that is not politically interesting. I show how this serves to prevent deep dissent from the status quo, and particularly from the existing, unjust order of property, from registering as dissent at all. Feminists have long argued that the exclusion of what is deemed ‘personal’ from the sphere of the political is itself a (conservative) political move. I propose that the construction of ‘the criminal’ as a category opposed to the political constitutes a similar barrier to emancipatory social transformation. I suggest, further, that under conditions of ‘real existing liberalism’, some kinds of conflict with the law have the potential not only to manifest but also to forge ‘resistant subjectivities’. I conclude that political philosophy, insofar as its purpose is emancipatory, should be more interested in the perspectives of criminals than it hitherto has been
High growth rate 4H-SiC epitaxial growth using dichlorosilane in a hot-wall CVD reactor
Thick, high quality 4H-SiC epilayers have been grown in a vertical hot-wall
chemical vapor deposition system at a high growth rate on (0001) 80 off-axis
substrates. We discuss the use of dichlorosilane as the Si-precursor for 4H-SiC
epitaxial growth as it provides the most direct decomposition route into SiCl2,
which is the predominant growth species in chlorinated chemistries. A specular
surface morphology was attained by limiting the hydrogen etch rate until the
system was equilibrated at the desired growth temperature. The RMS roughness of
the grown films ranged from 0.5-2.0 nm with very few morphological defects
(carrots, triangular defects, etc.) being introduced, while enabling growth
rates of 30-100 \mum/hr, 5-15 times higher than most conventional growths.
Site-competition epitaxy was observed over a wide range of C/Si ratios, with
doping concentrations < 1x1014 cm-3 being recorded. X-ray rocking curves
indicated that the epilayers were of high crystallinity, with linewidths as
narrow as 7.8 arcsec being observed, while microwave photoconductive decay
(\muPCD) measurements indicated that these films had high injection (ambipolar)
carrier lifetimes in the range of 2 \mus
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