Author:
Omanga Duncan,Mainye Pamela,Kashara Erick Juma
Abstract
Police and gangs have rarely featured as important loci of popular cultural forms, especially in Africa. As an institution, the police in Kenya are abstruse, opaque and often seen as against, and not for society. Popular culture is not only a window and a peek into how a society mainstreams ways of “looking” but also a way through which society articulates potentially controversial subjects. Nothing comes close to the controversy surrounding the subject of police killings of suspected gang members in Eastlands, Nairobi, Kenya. News reports on crime in Nairobi, drawing from news-gathering routines and news values that privilege specific experiences while excluding others, have framed gang violence in specific “singular narratives.” However, Facebook use in Eastlands Nairobi provides a unique canvas through which the imaginary of a “super-cop” is given multiple, if not conflicting meanings. “Super-cops” describe an unorthodox form of policing where specific policemen (mostly male), through a mix of public consent and state sanction, particularly in Eastlands, Nairobi, use extrajudicial means to confront suspected violent gangs. This paper reveals how Facebook groups’ discourse in Eastlands provides lenses that circulate alternative, if not equally controversial readings of so-called “super-cops” in ways that draw from Kenya’s conflicted urban histories to managing violent gangs in the city.
Reference35 articles.
1. Akech, J. M. 2005. “Public Law Values and the Politics of Criminal (In)justice: Creating a Democratic Framework for Policing in Kenya.” Oxford University Commonwealth Law Journal 5 (2): 225–256.
2. Anderson, D. 2002. “Vigilantes, Violence and the Politics of Public Order in Kenya.” African Affairs 101 (405): 531–555. Accessed July 9, 2020. www.jstor.org/stable/3518466. https://doi.org/10.1093/afraf/101.405.531.
3. Anderson, D., and D. Killingray. 1991. Policing the Empire: Government, Authority and Control, 1830–1940. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
4. Aseka, E. M. 1990., “Urbanisation.” In Themes in Kenyan History, 44–67, edited by W. Ochieng. Nairobi, London: Heineman.
5. Chandravarkar, R. 1998. “Plague Panic and Epidemic Politics in India, 1896–1914.” In Imperial Power and Power Politics, 234–65. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献