The racial politics of police warfare
by Jasbinder S. Nijjar
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Endorsements
Movements like Black Lives Matter and ongoing police racism are routinely dismissed in Britain, despite undeniable evidence to the contrary. Macpherson's landmark recognition of London's Metropolitan Police as 'institutionally racist' is heralded as having restored modern policing's apparent modus operandi of impartial public service provision. In this examination of present-day police power, Jasbinder S. Nijjar reveals that racism continues to shape police infrastructure coterminous with militarisation. He foregrounds the overlooked intersection between post-race logic and a liberal conception of war, which has reinvented racism as an indistinct strategy of everyday police warfare in post-Macpherson neoliberal Britain. In critiquing the 'total policing' of 'gangs' and 'terrorism' together, the book presents a cutting-edge analysis of today's relationship between anti-black and anti-Muslim racisms. It illustrates how anti-gang and counter-terrorism policies avoid references to race while associating black and Muslim populations with collective criminality and national insecurity, making them common enemies of modernity in the police imagination. A captivating book that documents a contemporary renewal of modern police's real original function: the systematic regulation of race through war power spanning daily methods of securitisation, pre-emption and disposability. 'A forensic critique of policing through interlocking lenses of institutional racism, war and state control. Unflinching in its analysis, the book reveals British policing as a biopolitical system engineered to curate and rationalise the militaristic regulation and dehumanisation of racial subjects. A must-read for anyone seeking to confront the violent realities of state racism and imagine anti-racist, humane alternatives.' - Sarita Malik, Brunel University of London
Reviews
Movements like Black Lives Matter and ongoing police racism are routinely dismissed in Britain, despite undeniable evidence to the contrary. Macpherson's landmark recognition of London's Metropolitan Police as 'institutionally racist' is heralded as having restored modern policing's apparent modus operandi of impartial public service provision. In this examination of present-day police power, Jasbinder S. Nijjar reveals that racism continues to shape police infrastructure coterminous with militarisation. He foregrounds the overlooked intersection between post-race logic and a liberal conception of war, which has reinvented racism as an indistinct strategy of everyday police warfare in post-Macpherson neoliberal Britain. In critiquing the 'total policing' of 'gangs' and 'terrorism' together, the book presents a cutting-edge analysis of today's relationship between anti-black and anti-Muslim racisms. It illustrates how anti-gang and counter-terrorism policies avoid references to race while associating black and Muslim populations with collective criminality and national insecurity, making them common enemies of modernity in the police imagination. A captivating book that documents a contemporary renewal of modern police's real original function: the systematic regulation of race through war power spanning daily methods of securitisation, pre-emption and disposability. 'A forensic critique of policing through interlocking lenses of institutional racism, war and state control. Unflinching in its analysis, the book reveals British policing as a biopolitical system engineered to curate and rationalise the militaristic regulation and dehumanisation of racial subjects. A must-read for anyone seeking to confront the violent realities of state racism and imagine anti-racist, humane alternatives.' - Sarita Malik, Brunel University of London
Author Biography
Jasbinder S. Nijjar is an Honorary Research Fellow in the Social and Political Sciences Department at Brunel University of London.
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press is a leading UK publisher known for excellent research in the humanities and social sciences.
View all titlesBibliographic Information
- Publisher Manchester University Press
- Publication Date May 2026
- Orginal LanguageEnglish
- ISBN/Identifier 9781526174420 / 1526174421
- Publication Country or regionUnited Kingdom
- FormatPrint PDF
- Pages312
- ReadershipCollege/higher education; Professional and scholarly
- Publish StatusPublished
- Dimensions234 X 156 mm
- Biblio NotesDerived from Proprietary 5963
- SeriesRacism, Resistance and Social Change
- Reference Code15868
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