“Writing about the world of policing makes a difference, and Fassin and his colleagues show how in this welcome volume. This collection of superb original papers, organized around themes like ‘position’, ‘observation’, and ‘description’, is prefaced by Fassin’s masterful reflections on ‘writing up’. A classic in the making, this is an assessment of an emergent field and a vision for future research.”
— Peter K. Manning, Northeastern University
“Writing the World of Policing reinvents and returns ethnographic scholarship to the curiously neglected themes of the policing of poor neighborhoods, underprivileged populations, and marginalized minorities. With narrative verve, this carefully edited volume provides an empirically grounded account of just how the police everywhere shape and are shaped by the strikingly comparable work they do.”
— John Van Maanen, author of Tales of the Field
“Fassin has asked some of the world’s best ethnographers of policing to reflect on the ethical, political and practical complexities of describing this unstable, if indispensable, heart of modern statecraft. The result is a unique collection of personal and reflexive essays, theoretically astute and global in scope, while deeply attentive to how the ethnographer co-produces the situation under analysis. This volume is not only timely and important at this historical juncture, it is also a contribution of lasting value that will inspire students and aspiring ethnographers and seasoned fieldworkers from all disciplines.”
— Thomas Blom Hansen, Stanford University
"Policing is an important topic in criminal justice research, discussion, and debate. In this edited collection's 12 chapters, scholars from across the globe explore the institution of policing. The authors discuss policing in South Africa, India, Taiwan, Mozambique, Turkey, Chile, Bolivia, Thailand, Portugal, France, and the US. As the field of criminology has matured, the use of quantitative methods to analyze social phenomena has become widespread. This book breaks from the trend by taking an ethnographic approach to examining police and policing. The contributing authors specifically examine topics such as discretion, violence, and training. . . . This informative, well-written book will be a valued addition to university library collections seeking to support anthropology, sociology, or criminology and criminal justice programs. It could serve as a resource for research or as assigned reading for graduate seminars concerning policing or qualitative research methods in criminology and criminal justice. Highly recommended."
— CHOICE