In this section, you can access to the latest technical information related to the FUTURE project topic.

Revanchism via Pedestrianism: Street"?level Bureaucracy in the Production of Uneven Policing Landscapes

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/anti.12696?af=R Abstract

In this Afterword, I reflect on the themes of race and coloniality in political ecology highlighted by this Symposium. I draw upon and place in conversation scholarly work on Latin America to demonstrate how, notwithstanding disparate social"?historical contexts, Indigenous and Black communities encounter strikingly similar struggles for land and territorial control across the Americas. I build my comments from a fusion of postcolonial, decolonial and black feminist thinking to bolster the importance of intimate and inseparable entanglements between people's lands and their bodies within political ecological analyses. In the following, I shape this commentary into three co"?constitutive discussions: first, that political ecologies of race are hemispheric; second, that race and coloniality condition the lives of Indigenous and Black peoples relationally in the Americas; and third, that these multiple and mutually constituted ideologies, namely intersectional forms of power, shaping land and land control are profoundly material and embodied.

» Author: 2> <p>The emergence over the last decade of large numbers of vulnerable EU citizens begging on Swedish streets has led to ambivalent responses from the Swedish state, including from local police forces charged with policing public order. Based on

» Source: Wiley

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