Researching Protest Policing in South Africa: A Discourse Analysis of the Police–Researcher Encounter

Author:

Cornell Josephine1ORCID,Malherbe Nick23ORCID,Seedat Mohamed23ORCID,Suffla Shahnaaz23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, School of Social Sciences, Birmingham City University , Curzon Building, Cardigan Street, City Centre Campus, Birmingham B4 7BD , UK

2. Institute for Social and Health Sciences, University of South Africa

3. South African Medical Research Council-University of South Africa Masculinity and Health Research Unit , P. O. Box 1087 Lenasia, Johannesburg, South Africa, 1820

Abstract

Abstract Researchers have played a significant role in influencing the public’s critical engagement with the South African Police Service (SAPS). Resultantly, SAPS officers tend to be wary and/or untrusting of researchers. In the present study, we sought to understand how this climate of suspicion impacts policing research in South Africa. To do so, we employed a Foucauldian Discourse Analysis on emails leading up to a study with SAPS officers, and on the transcripts of three focus group discussions with SAPS officers. We identified three discursive strategies that SAPS employed: Security Stall (i.e. blocking research through bureaucratic procedure), Eliciting Sympathy (i.e. winning sympathy for the struggles of SAPS officers) and Undermining the Researcher Subjectivity (i.e. rendering legitimate knowledge on protest violence the sole product of police officers). These strategies destabilize police research while challenging the broader discursive terrain within which SAPS is located. We conclude by offering some insights for police research.

Funder

South African Medical Research Council

University of South Africa

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Law

Reference42 articles.

1. ‘The Use and Abuse of police Data in Protest: Analysis South Africa’s Incident Registration Information System (IRIS).’;Alexander;South African Crime Quarterly,2016

2. ‘Democracy and its Discontents: Protest from a Police Perspective.’;Brooks;South African Crime Quarterly,2019

3. ‘“This Democracy Is Killing Us”: Perceptions of Rights And Democracy In The South African Police Service.’;Brooks;Journal of Modern African Studies,2020

4. Undoing the Demos

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