Policing is widely understood, empirically and theoretically, as a core function of the state. Much of the knowledge presumes that police are the only body that may kill and arbitrate killing, routinely and without retaliation from contesting parties, as a means of establishing and maintaining a legitimate legal order. This dissertation examines an urban circumstance where killing and its regulation is not simply the realm of police. São Paulo, Brazil is a city with parallel normative logics of killing. Via ethnographic research with homicide detectives, I examine these two logics: homicides and police killings known as resistencias. Under democratic restructuring, with failing public security and underwritten by historic and spatial inequities inscribed via disparate processes of urbanization and planning, investigations reveal the practice of a 'normal' homicide that is a product of a system of governance in the urban periphery. Killing has become the realm of an organized crime group known as the Primeiro Comando da Capital (PCC). Via a prison-periphery nexus, the PCC determines the moral borderlines of violence in the spaces it controls. In apparent moral contrast, police kill citizens at a rate of roughly one per day. Under the rubric of 'resisting arrest' there is a presumption of guilt for the dead and a presumption of innocence for the shooter. Homicide detectives investigate and arbitrate whether these presumptions are 'appropriate'. When not, a resistencia becomes a homicide and the offending police are arrested on the spot by detectives. I track the 'deservedness' of each logic and find that while the two appear antagonistic, there is often a confluence of imaginaries, coalescing in an implicit and obscured 'killing consensus'. This consensus is consolidated via co-orientation and everyday practices pointing towards mutually understood spatial and moral boundaries of who can be killed, why and where, underpinning a decline in homicides here by more than 75% since 2000. Yet, in a 2012 crisis that consensus was 'killed'. Violence erupted between police and the PCC, rupturing the everyday forms of equilibria that have given this city a false floor of security in recent years. Lastly, I examine how public debate and a modest effort to contribute to it led to contradictory reforms.
The Killing Consensus: Homicide Detectives, Police that Kill and Organized Crime in São Paulo, Brazil
Tipo de material
Tese Doutorado
Autor Principal
Denyer-Willis, Graham
Sexo
Homem
Orientador
Davis, Diane E.
Ano de Publicação
2013
Local da Publicação
Estados Unidos
Programa
Urban Studies and Planning
Instituição
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Idioma
Inglês
Palavras chave
Social sciences
Resumo
Disciplina
Área Temática
Referência Espacial
Região
Região Metropolitana de São Paulo
Zona
Zona Sul
Cidade/Município
São Paulo
Bairro/Distrito
Jardim Ângela; Paraisópolis
Macrorregião
Sudeste
Brasil
Habilitado
UF
São Paulo
Referência Temporal
A partir de 2000
Localização Eletrônica
https://search.proquest.com/pqdtglobal/docview/1476206397/D0A7FFC60C5347A3PQ/4?accountid=201410