Affiliation:
1. Stockholm University, Sweden
2. University of Helsinki, Finland
Abstract
This article builds on two interview studies on racial profiling conducted in Finland and Sweden. It examines policing practices in order to elaborate on the understanding of what we define as the ‘racial welfare state’. The analysis draws attention to the ways that bordering practices reproduce racial orders, within and beyond the nation-state. The embeddedness of the Nordic region in the western sphere, with its colonial legacies, is highlighted through the empirical material that focuses on the consequences of internal and external migration controls, as well as more general police stop-and-search practices. The study underlines the need to investigate racial profiling as a practice that enforces an imagined community based not on whiteness in general, but on Nordic whiteness in particular as the norm against which the bodies of ‘others’ are measured.
Funder
Civil Right Defenders in Sweden
Kone foundation in Finland
Subject
Law,Sociology and Political Science,Pathology and Forensic Medicine
Cited by
30 articles.
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