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2.
J Homosex ; 66(7): 937-969, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29883282

ABSTRACT

This article explores queer sexual policing in late Imperial St. Petersburg (c.1900-1917). The focus is on the street-level constables who bore the principal responsibility for policing male homosexual offenses in the city's public and semi-public spaces. This emphasis on the street-level policing of homosexuality contrasts with other discussions of gay urban history and the oppression of queer men by the authorities. The article draws on new evidence from precinct-level police archives to complement and challenge previous discussions of queer sexual policing in the Imperial capital. By taking the fate of queer men in an autocratic city, this article refines our understanding of the ways in which homosexual practices and identities emerged in modern times. Specifically, it builds on Michel Foucault's descriptions of constables as "arbiters of illegalities," where the term arbiter suggests rule-based and yet discretionary coercion. Here, the influential model of disciplinary policing of sexuality is complemented by an emphasis on the role of discretionary power in the history of homosexuality.


Subject(s)
Homosexuality, Male/history , Police/history , Sexual and Gender Minorities/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male , Russia , Sex Offenses/history , Sex Offenses/legislation & jurisprudence , Sexual and Gender Minorities/legislation & jurisprudence
3.
Forensic Sci Med Pathol ; 14(1): 133-138, 2018 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29058106

ABSTRACT

A gunfight between police and a gang of men led by the self-styled "Captain Moonlite", a.k.a. George Scott, occurred on 16th November 1879 at a farmhouse near Wantabadgery Station in the colony of New South Wales. The skirmish resulted in the deaths of two bushrangers and one police officer. As a result, Captain Moonlite and Thomas Rogan were hung in Sydney's Darlinghurst Gaol on 20 January 1880 for the murder of Constable Edward Webb-Bowen. Culpability for firing the fatal shot, however, has remained a source of controversy. Information obtained from an analysis of historical records was used to guide an archeological excavation at the scene of the shooting in which Terrestrial Laser Scanning (TLS) technology was employed to produce a digital (3D) terrain model of the siege location. Utilizing the terrain model, the relative positions of Moonlite, Webb-Bowen, and the other gang members were established with possible projectile trajectories plotted. This, in combination with inquest evidence from a gun maker and the medical practitioner who examined Constable Webb-Bowen's wound, indicates that the most likely shooter was Gus Warnicke, aged 15 years, the youngest member of the gang, who was also killed in the exchange of fire.


Subject(s)
Forensic Ballistics/methods , Police/history , Wounds, Gunshot/history , History, 19th Century , Humans , New South Wales
4.
Dynamis (Granada) ; 38(1): 131-162, 2018. ilus
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-173243

ABSTRACT

Se estudia la adopción de las huellas dactilares como método de identificación en Argentina y España durante los primeros años del siglo XX. A través de su epistolario conjunto se analizan los intercambios entre Juan Vucetich (1858-1925), creador del sistemaargentino, y Federico Olóriz Aguilera (1855-1912), principal impulsor de la dactiloscopia en España. Se reconstruye a continuación la llegada de las clasificaciones de Vucetich a España a partir de 1906. Se estudian los factores que facilitaron su adaptación al nuevo escenario, debido a la posición privilegiada de Olóriz a caballo entre el mundo académico y profesional. También se examinaron las primeras propuestas de extensión de las huellas dactilares más allá del entorno policial a uno y otro lado del Atlántico. Se analizan de forma comparada las resistencias a la implantación de las huellas dactilares por parte de académicos, identificadorese identificados. A continuación se revisan las campañas de propaganda y legitimación que emprendieron ambos protagonistas a través de cartas, viajes, congresos, publicaciones, cursos y experimentos públicos. El artículo se cierra con la visita de Vucetich a España, lo que permite conocer los múltiples escenarios y personajes interesados en las nuevas técnicas de identificación alrededor de 1913. Pretendemos mostrar que, más allá de los usos policiales y coercitivos, sobre los que se han centrado la historiografía anglosajona, las huellas dactilares fueron percibidas también como herramientas para acceder (o limitar) derechos sociales y para realizar (o denegar) actividades administrativas y económicas, dando lugar a una variedad de estrategias de legitimación, controversias y respuestas (AU)


No disponible


Subject(s)
Humans , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Dermatoglyphics/history , Forensic Anthropology/history , Police/history , Prisons/history , Anthropology, Physical/history , Anthropometry/history , Spain , Argentina
6.
Rev. crim ; 55(3): 351-367, sept.-dic. 2013.
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-708196

ABSTRACT

Se aborda la temática de la mezcla de funciones preventivas y represivas de la Policía en la actualidad, simbiosis que ha venido ocurriendo a medida que evoluciona la concepción de la agencia policial, no solo como agente de enfrentamiento de las conductas socialmente desviadas y delictivas, sino también como pieza preventiva en los entornos sociocomunitarios, donde se originan muchas de las modalidades delictivas y socialmente desviadas, que tanto afectan en primer orden a la ciudadanía y al Estado en general. La policía comunitaria se convierte en referente de la investigación, lo que encamina a analizar la figura del Jefe de Sector en Cuba, a través de métodos de revisión bibliográfica y análisis de documentos, que demuestran cómo desde su concepción posee aciertos y aspectos aún por perfeccionar.


Aborda-se a temática da mistura de funções preventivas e repressivas da Polícia na atualidade, a simbiose que acontece enquanto evoluciona a concepção da agência policial, não somente como o agente de enfrentamento das condutas socialmente desviadas e criminais, mas também como a peça preventiva nos ambientes socio-comunitários, onde muitas das modalidades criminais e socialmente desviadas são originadas, quanto afetam na primeira ordem à cidadania e no Estado em geral. A polícia comunitária torna-se um referente de investigação, que conduz a análise da figura do Chefe do Setor em Cuba, através dos métodos de revisão bibliográfica e análise de documentos, que demonstram como desde sua concepção tem sucessos e aspectos ainda para aperfeiçoar.


The subject dealing with the current mixture of the Police preventive and repressive roles is approached as a symbiosis that has been taking place as the conception of the police agency evolves not only as an agent of confrontation of socially deviated and criminal conducts but also as a preventive piece in the social and community environments where many of those criminal and socially deviated modalities originate and so hardly affect citizens in the first place and the State at large. Community Police becomes an investigation referent, which helps analyze through methods involving bibliographical review and document analysis the figure of the Chief of the Police Sector in Cuba and how from its very conception it has shown both successes, failures, and areas for improvement.


Subject(s)
Administrative Police , Police/education , Police/history , Police/legislation & jurisprudence , Police/organization & administration , Police
7.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23672072

ABSTRACT

The present report covers the history of origination of concept of medical police in the second half of XVIII century. This body became one of the most important tool of state governance in Austria. France, Prussia and Russia. The relationship between origin of this concept and the results of scientific studies in area of investigation of epidemic constitutions is demonstrated. Two directions of activity of bodies of state governance are considered concerning the implementation of medical police--imposition of public administration of activities of physicians and development by joint efforts of physicians and lawyers of special physician sanitary legislation.


Subject(s)
Police/history , Public Health/history , State Government , Austria , France , History, 18th Century , Humans , Physicians/history , Physicians/legislation & jurisprudence , Physicians/organization & administration , Prussia , Public Health/legislation & jurisprudence , Russia (Pre-1917) , Sanitation/legislation & jurisprudence
8.
Acta Dermatovenerol Croat ; 21(1): 5-11, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23683480

ABSTRACT

Until the works of Fran Gundrum, there was no comprehensive analysis of sexuality in Croatia. In this article, we investigate the background of Gundrum's book Sexual Health Care, the first book on sexual hygiene in Croatia. We analyzed the motivational effect venereal diseases had on writing the book, as well as the metaphoric language he used to conceptualize them. Venereal diseases are presented in his work as a consequence of irresponsible sexual behavior, and are interpreted using the analogy of natural state of English political philosopher Thomas Hobbes. All aspects of his suggestions for suppression of venereal diseases were colored by giving priority to social over individual well-being. Tradition and modernity intermix in his work, shaping him as the pioneer of sexual hygiene on our territory in the times when questions about heredity and survival of the nation started to forcefully shape public health policies.


Subject(s)
Sexually Transmitted Diseases/history , Venereology/history , Croatia , Family/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Hygiene/history , Police/history , Public Health/history
9.
Psicothema (Oviedo) ; 25(1): 55-60, ene.-mar. 2013.
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-108597

ABSTRACT

Antecedentes: Francisco J. de Echalecu (1897-1957) fue un psiquiatra español que ocupó los cargos de profesor de Psicología en la Escuela General de Policía y neuropsiquiatra de la Dirección General de Seguridad. Método: en este trabajo se presenta una breve biografía del Dr. Echalecu y se analiza la transcripción de sus clases de Psicologia Criminal de 1942, su Psicología Criminal de 1947, así como su intervención en el caso de las torturas al líder comunista Heriberto Quiñones. Resultados: se presenta su proyecto de una Psicología criminal totalitaria y su propuesta de intervención social, en base tanto a métodos eugenésicos como de reclusión obligatoria de los clasificados como asociales. Se describe la adaptación en España del proyecto psicológico totalitario a la nueva realidad internacional creada tras la segunda Guerra Mundial. Conclusiones: en España se preparaba una «solución final» para la delincuencia y la disidencia política, inspirada en la política criminal nazi y promovida por el Dr. Echalecu desde la máxima instancia policial de España, la DGS. El proyecto se frustró por la derrota alemana en la Guerra Mundial, y del proyecto original solo quedó la aplicación arbitraria a los individuos considerados asociales de la Ley de Vagos y Maleantes (AU)


Francisco J. de Echalecu (1897-1957) was a Spanish psychiatrist who held important positions, such as Psychology Professor at the Academia General de Policía and Neuropsychiatrist at the Dirección General de Seguridad. Method: This work provides a brief biography of Echalecu and analyzes the transcriptions of his classes on Criminal Psychology of 1942, his Criminal Psychology from 1947 as well as his involvement in the case of the torture of Communist leader Heriberto Quiñones. Results: We describe his project of a totalitarian Psychology and his proposal of social intervention, including eugenic methodologies as well as forced reclusion for those labeled as asocial. The adaptation in Spain of the totalitarian psychological project to the new international reality after the Second World War is also described. Conclusions: In Spain a «final solution» for criminals and political dissidents has been prepared, which was inspired by the Nazi criminal policies and promoted by Dr. Echalecu from Spain’s higher police body, the DGS. This project was frustrated by the German defeat in the world war and the only thing left from the original project was the arbitrary application of the Ley de Vagos y Maleantes [an antivagrancy law] to those individuals labeled as «asocial» (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , History, 18th Century , Criminal Psychology/methods , Criminal Psychology/standards , Criminal Psychology/trends , Criminals/psychology , Criminal Psychology/history , Criminal Psychology/organization & administration , Criminals/history , Police/history , Police/standards
10.
Int J Drug Policy ; 24(3): 238-43, 2013 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23352333

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: This qualitative historical policy analysis explores Japan's early postwar market for hiropon (methamphetamine/meth) and the impact of its anti-hiropon campaigns. The paper traces the origins of medical methamphetamine production in prewar Japan; known at that time by its former brand-name, 'Philopon' (pronounced hiropon), and argues that the anti-meth 'shock-horror' campaigns of the 1950s were exacerbated by long-simmering animosity toward non-Japanese residents - especially Koreans and Taiwanese. METHODS: Through an analysis of both English- and Japanese-language source materials, the paper explores the gritty, frightening themes of Japan's 1950s-era anti-meth propaganda campaigns and the parallel effort by police to arrest, prosecute, and deport members of the resident Korean and Taiwanese communities. RESULTS: The author demonstrates that by incorporating a wider variety of contemporary Japanese-language sources such as news reports and anti-drug propaganda materials about the postwar hiropon trade, we may more fully appreciate the historic, underlying social tensions behind the swift and targeted public response. CONCLUSION: The author concludes that Japan's postwar federal and municipal governments, together with police and media agencies, cultivated a sensational 'drug panic' designed both to dissuade citizens from using hiropon and to fuel a concerted police campaign against non-Japanese involved in the meth trade.


Subject(s)
Amphetamine-Related Disorders/prevention & control , Emigrants and Immigrants/history , Methamphetamine/adverse effects , Amphetamine-Related Disorders/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Japan/epidemiology , Mass Media/history , Methamphetamine/history , Police/history , Propaganda
11.
Psicothema ; 25(1): 55-60, 2013 Feb.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23336544

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Francisco J. de Echalecu (1897-1957) was a Spanish psychiatrist who held important positions, such as Psychology Professor at the Academia General de Policía and Neuropsychiatrist at the Dirección General de Seguridad. METHOD: This work provides a brief biography of Echalecu and analyzes the transcriptions of his classes on Criminal Psychology of 1942, his Criminal Psychology from 1947 as well as his involvement in the case of the torture of Communist leader Heriberto Quiñones. RESULTS: We describe his project of a totalitarian Psychology and his proposal of social intervention, including eugenic methodologies as well as forced reclusion for those labeled as asocial. The adaptation in Spain of the totalitarian psychological project to the new international reality after the Second World War is also described. CONCLUSIONS: In Spain a "final solution" for criminals and political dissidents has been prepared, which was inspired by the Nazi criminal policies and promoted by Dr. Echalecu from Spain's higher police body, the DGS. This project was frustrated by the German defeat in the world war and the only thing left from the original project was the arbitrary application of the Ley de Vagos y Maleantes [an antivagrancy law] to those individuals labeled as "asocial".


Subject(s)
Criminal Psychology/history , Government/history , Police/history , History, 20th Century , Spain
12.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24432583

ABSTRACT

The article considers the main political, social, economic and scientific aftermath of practical realization of concept of medical police in late XVIII--seventieth years of XIX centuries. The issues of cardinal reformation of hygiene and its selection as an independent scientific discipline are analyzed in detail. The issues related to becoming of epidemiology are discussed too.


Subject(s)
Disease Outbreaks/history , Hygiene/history , Police/history , Public Health/history , Disease Outbreaks/prevention & control , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , Humans
13.
Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci ; 44(1): 16-25, 2013 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23036861

ABSTRACT

This article explores the articulation of a novel forensic object-the 'crime scene'-and its corresponding expert-the investigating officer. Through a detailed engagement with the work of the late nineteenth-century Austrian jurist and criminalist Hans Gross, it analyses the dynamic and reflexive nature of this model of 'CSI', emphasising the material, physical, psychological and instrumental means through which the crime scene as a delineated space, and its investigator as a disciplined agent operating within it, jointly came into being. It has a further, historiographic, aim: to move away from the commonplace emphasis in histories of forensics on fin-de-siècle criminology and toward its comparatively under-explored contemporary, criminalistics. In so doing, it opens up new ways of thinking about the crime scene as a defining feature of our present-day forensic culture that recognise its historical contingency and the complex processes at work in its creation and development.


Subject(s)
Crime/history , Criminal Law/history , Culture , Expert Testimony/legislation & jurisprudence , Forensic Sciences/history , Historiography , Police/history , Austria , Crime/legislation & jurisprudence , Forensic Sciences/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 19th Century , Humans , Literature, Modern/history , Police/legislation & jurisprudence
14.
Br J Sociol ; 63(4): 704-29, 2012 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23240839

ABSTRACT

The moral modality of colonial power is still with us when it comes to the recreation of sexual norms of traditional or feudal society. We can examine the emergent properties of colonial knowledge anew by exploring how the colonial regime's strategic attention of regulating brothels in India differed from the analytic of power Foucault described for sexuality in European society. It turns out that amongst other things, public anxieties about the failure of adaptation by South Asians are incapable of leaving sexuality aside as a key interpretive device for their culture. The British preoccupation with reproducing the dynamics of the bourgeois matrimonial market on foreign soil in the mid-nineteenth century similarly necessitated a sociological pretext for racial purity. However, the kind of knowledge a typical traveller and employee of the East India Company brought to the Victorian public from his own researches in the brothels and streets of colonial India, which revealed how popular prostitution was as a vice amongst the officer class, was also more than a welcome imaginary relief from Christian morality; it was an alternative vision of modernity.


Subject(s)
Colonialism/history , Sex Work/history , Female , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , India , Male , Police/history , Sex Work/ethnology , Sex Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Sexuality/ethnology , Sexuality/history , Social Values/ethnology , Social Values/history , United Kingdom/ethnology
15.
Hist Sci Med ; 46(2): 95-110, 2012.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23038863

ABSTRACT

The French law of 1822 created a homogeneous maritime health police all along the French coastline. Noteworthy in many respects, it was however very binding since it included some penalties of an extraordinary harshness as hard labour or even death. It was first disputed by those against the theory of contagion and the maritime and commercial circles, but subsequently it became overtaken by scientific knowledge despite numerous facilities and some important remodelling decrees were decided, one of them in 1876 just before the Pasteur revolution and another in 1896. The aim was then not only to prevent, epidemics (plague, cholera, yellow fever) crossing the borders of the national country, but also to prevent them from spreading out of their original cradles. Later it was the beginning of the sanitary international cooperation with the training of special eastern practitioners who could take sanitary precautions close to the sources of infection.


Subject(s)
Communicable Disease Control/history , Police/history , Communicable Disease Control/legislation & jurisprudence , France , History, 19th Century , Police/legislation & jurisprudence , Ships
16.
J Urban Hist ; 37(5): 757-74, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22073438

ABSTRACT

Throughout the first three decades of the twentieth century, black people in New York City encountered white violence, especially police brutality in Manhattan. The black community used various strategies to curtail white mob violence and police brutality, one of which was self-defense. This article examines blacks' response to violence, specifically the debate concerning police brutality and self-defense in Harlem during the 1920s. While historians have examined race riots, blacks' everyday encounters with police violence in the North have received inadequate treatment. By approaching everyday violence and black responses­self-defense, legal redress, and journalists' remonstrations­as a process of political development, this article argues that the systematic violence perpetrated by the police both mobilized and politicized blacks individually and collectively to defend their community, but also contributed to a community consciousness that established police brutality as a legitimate issue for black protest.


Subject(s)
Black or African American , Police , Race Relations , Residence Characteristics , Social Problems , Violence , Black or African American/education , Black or African American/ethnology , Black or African American/history , Black or African American/legislation & jurisprudence , Black or African American/psychology , Civil Disorders/economics , Civil Disorders/ethnology , Civil Disorders/history , Civil Disorders/legislation & jurisprudence , Civil Disorders/psychology , History, 20th Century , Humans , New York City/ethnology , Police/economics , Police/education , Police/history , Police/legislation & jurisprudence , Race Relations/history , Race Relations/legislation & jurisprudence , Race Relations/psychology , Residence Characteristics/history , Riots/economics , Riots/ethnology , Riots/history , Riots/legislation & jurisprudence , Riots/psychology , Social Class/history , Social Conditions/economics , Social Conditions/history , Social Conditions/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Problems/economics , Social Problems/ethnology , Social Problems/history , Social Problems/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Problems/psychology , Violence/economics , Violence/ethnology , Violence/history , Violence/legislation & jurisprudence , Violence/psychology
17.
20 Century Br Hist ; 22(1): 79-102, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21879582

ABSTRACT

This article explores debates concerning the methods and styles used by the police service in its dealings with children and young people in post-war Scotland (in comparison with England). Study of the implementation of Police Juvenile Liaison Schemes is used to consider shifting points of tension as well as cooperation between the police and other occupational groups engaged in work at the nexus of youth justice-welfare. Whilst often characterized as contradictory tendencies, the article demonstrates that a social welfare ethic and a criminal justice ethic were coexistent within the rhetoric and practice of policing, but that they operated in a state of flux. It also argues that styles of policing were subject to change, particularly as the use of discretionary and informal methods was increasingly challenged, as physical violence was increasingly seen as an outmoded recourse for the institutions of criminal justice, and as the policing of youth was increasingly politicized. The post-war period can be characterized in terms of greater levels of public scrutiny, the formalization of processes previously undertaken through informal or semi-formal mechanisms, and attempts (not always successful) to systematize procedures nationally in terms of the Scottish state.


Subject(s)
Juvenile Delinquency/history , Police/history , Social Work/history , Adolescent , Child , Female , History, 20th Century , Humans , Juvenile Delinquency/prevention & control , Male , Scotland
18.
Signs (Chic) ; 36(3): 707-31, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21919274

ABSTRACT

In 1993, a group of women shocked Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, with the news that dozens of girls and women had been murdered and dumped, like garbage, around the city during the year. As the numbers of murders grew over the years, and as the police forces proved unwilling and unable to find the perpetrators, the protestors became activists. They called the violence and its surrounding impunity "femicide," and they demanded that the Mexican government, at the local, state, and federal levels, stop the violence and capture the perpetrators. Nearly two decades later, the city's infamy as a place of femicide is giving way to another terrible reputation as a place of unprecedented drug violence. Since 2006, more than six thousand people have died in the city, as have more than twenty-eight thousand across the country, in relation to the violence associated with the restructuring of the cartels that control the production and distribution of illegal drugs. In response to the public outcry against the violence, the Mexican government has deployed thousands of troops to Ciudad Juárez as part of a military strategy to secure the state against the cartels. In this essay, I argue that the politics over the meaning of the drug-related murders and femicide must be understood in relation to gendered violence and its use as a tool for securing the state. To that end, I examine the wars over the interpretation of death in northern Mexico through a feminist application of the concept of necropolitics as elaborated by the postcolonial scholar Achille Mbembe. I examine how the wars over the political meaning of death in relation both to femicide and to the events called "drug violence" unfold through a gendering of space, of violence, and of subjectivity. My objective is twofold: first, to demonstrate how the antifemicide movement illustrates the stakes for a democratic Mexican state and its citizens in a context where governing elites argue that the violence devastating Ciudad Juárez is a positive outcome of the government's war against organized crime; and second, to show how a politics of gender is central to this kind of necropolitics.


Subject(s)
Government , Homicide , Social Problems , Violence , Women's Health , Women's Rights , Gender Identity , Government/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Homicide/economics , Homicide/ethnology , Homicide/history , Homicide/legislation & jurisprudence , Homicide/psychology , Law Enforcement/history , Mexico/ethnology , Police/economics , Police/education , Police/history , Police/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Problems/economics , Social Problems/ethnology , Social Problems/history , Social Problems/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Problems/psychology , United States/ethnology , Violence/economics , Violence/ethnology , Violence/history , Violence/legislation & jurisprudence , Violence/psychology , Women/education , Women/history , Women/psychology , Women's Health/ethnology , Women's Health/history , Women's Rights/economics , Women's Rights/education , Women's Rights/history , Women's Rights/legislation & jurisprudence
20.
Violence Against Women ; 16(9): 1055-60, 2010 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20710005

ABSTRACT

This essay offers reflections, both personal and professional, on the contributions of Ellen Pence to changes in law enforcement responses to domestic violence victims and offenders.


Subject(s)
Criminals/history , Law Enforcement/history , Police/history , Social Change/history , Spouse Abuse/history , Women's Rights/history , Criminals/legislation & jurisprudence , Female , History, 20th Century , Humans , Law Enforcement/methods , Male , Spouse Abuse/legislation & jurisprudence , United States , Women's Rights/legislation & jurisprudence
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