ABSTRACT

The Routledge International Handbook on Decolonizing Justice focuses on the growing worldwide movement aimed at decolonizing state policies and practices, and various disciplinary knowledges including criminology, social work and law. The collection of original chapters brings together cutting-edge, politically engaged work from a diverse group of writers who take as a starting point an analysis founded in a decolonizing, decolonial and/or Indigenous standpoint. Centering the perspectives of Black, First Nations and other racialized and minoritized peoples, the book makes an internationally significant contribution to the literature.

The chapters include analyses of specific decolonization policies and interventions instigated by communities to enhance jurisdictional self-determination; theoretical approaches to decolonization; the importance of research and research ethics as a key foundation of the decolonization process; crucial contemporary issues including deaths in custody, state crime, reparations, and transitional justice; and critical analysis of key institutions of control, including police, courts, corrections, child protection systems and other forms of carcerality.

The handbook is divided into five sections which reflect the breadth of the decolonizing literature:

• Why decolonization? From the personal to the global

• State terror and violence

• Abolishing the carceral

• Transforming and decolonizing justice

• Disrupting epistemic violence

This book offers a comprehensive and timely resource for activists, students, academics, and those with an interest in Indigenous studies, decolonial and post-colonial studies, criminal legal institutions and criminology. It provides critical commentary and analyses of the major issues for enhancing social justice internationally.

The Open Access version of this book, available at www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.

part I|77 pages

Why decolonization?

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chapter 1|8 pages

Between the lines of land and time

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chapter 3|11 pages

“Feeding people's beliefs”

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Mass media representations of Māori and criminality
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chapter 4|10 pages

Girramaa marramarra waluwin

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Decolonizing social work
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chapter 5|13 pages

The plastic shamans of restorative justice

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chapter 6|11 pages

Southern disorders

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The criminogenesis of neo-imperialism
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part II|145 pages

State terror and violence

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chapter 8|10 pages

Law's violence

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The police killing of Kumanjayi Walker and the trial of Zachary Rolfe
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chapter 12|12 pages

The obsolescence of ‘police brutality’

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Counterinsurgency in a moment of police reform
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chapter 13|10 pages

Army of the rich

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chapter 14|12 pages

Algorithms, policing, and race

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Insights from decolonial and critical algorithm studies
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chapter 16|10 pages

Inherited structures and ‘indigenized’ policing in Africa

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Insights from South Africa and Zimbabwe
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chapter 18|11 pages

Policing Muslims

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Counter-terrorism and Islamophobia in the UK and Australia
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chapter 19|11 pages

Decolonizing terrorism

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Racist pre-crime, cheap orientalism, and the Taqiya * trap
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chapter 20|11 pages

State Terror, Resistance, and Community Solidarity

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Dismantling the Police
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part III|85 pages

Abolishing the carceral

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chapter 22|12 pages

Colonial carceral feminism

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chapter 23|9 pages

Both sorry and happy

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Inquests into Indigenous deaths in custody
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chapter 24|12 pages

The quotidian violence of incarcerating Indigenous people in the Canadian state

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Why reform is not an option for decolonization
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chapter 25|11 pages

Disability, race, and the carceral state

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Toward an inclusive decolonial abolition
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chapter 27|10 pages

The school-to-prison pipeline

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part IV|123 pages

Transforming and decolonizing justice

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chapter 32|11 pages

Access to justice in South Africa

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Not yet Uhuru but not quite Sisulu: an examination of the decolonizing journey from colonial-apartheid rule
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chapter 35|11 pages

Colonialism and penality

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chapter 36|11 pages

Decolonizing criminal law in India

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chapter 37|11 pages

Transitional justice and decolonization

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chapter 38|10 pages

First, they took the land

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Decolonizing nature to decolonize society
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chapter 39|11 pages

Decolonizing genocide

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part V|93 pages

Disrupting epistemic violence

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chapter 40|11 pages

The decolonization paradigm in criminology

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chapter 41|11 pages

Black criminology

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chapter 42|10 pages

Decolonial criminology

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Oxymoron for necrocapitalism, racial capitalism, and the westernization of the professoriate
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chapter 43|11 pages

Mis-education of the critical criminologist

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Theory, meta-curriculum of onto-epistemology, and the myth of decolonization
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chapter 45|12 pages

Decolonizing criminological research methodologies

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Cognition, commitment, and conduct
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