‘People are Trapped in History and History is Trapped Inside Them’: Exploring Britain’s Racialized Colonial Legacies in Criminological Research

Author:

Parmar Alpa1ORCID,Earle Rod2,Phillips Coretta3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge , Cambridge , UK

2. School of Health and Social Care, Open University , Milton Keynes , UK

3. Department of Social Policy, London School of Economics and Political Science , London , UK

Abstract

Abstract In this paper, we advocate identifying the colonizing logics of race in criminological analysis, in recognition of their enduring postcolonial presence in societies like the United Kingdom. Our argument unfolds through the life stories narrated by three men entangled by colonial remnants of power(lessness), subservience, and criminalization. For Cairo (black) and Rafan (Asian), their subalternity is exposed through their vulnerability to racialized stereotypes which have a foundation in colonial histories. Both young minority ethnic men are also situated in a transnational, glocalized frame in which their racialized and gendered identities prescribed the nature of their belonging to a British nation-state irrevocably connected to the Empire. Our reflections on a third narrative interview of Barry reveal the dividends of whiteness, simultaneously occluded, disavowed, and yet wilfully upheld, but in a competitive and exclusive form of belonging. In the articulation and analysis of these stories of crime and order, we mine styles of reasoning from postcolonial theory, sociology, history, and philosophy to embolden a postcolonial criminology.

Funder

British Academy

LSE STICERD

ESRC

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Law,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Social Psychology,Pathology and Forensic Medicine

Reference91 articles.

1. ‘Decolonizing the Criminal Question’;Aliverti;Punishment & Society,2021

2. Subaltern Lives

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