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Empire on the Seine: The Policing of North Africans in Paris, 1925-1975 - Hardcover
Empire on the Seine: The Policing of North Africans in Paris, 1925-1975 - Hardcover
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by Amit Prakash (Author)
Why are relations between minorities and the police in France so fraught? Stripping away the myth that this tension is a sudden and recent disruption of its universalist republican tradition brought on by the presence of North African immigrants, Amit Prakash locates the origins of contemporary conflicts in race and empire in France's history. In Empire on the Seine, Prakash argues that the métropole and the colony dynamically co-developed a policing regime over the course of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to manage colonial and racial difference. With the North African community emerging as a sizable and durable presence in Paris after World War I, this policing became a key state practice in imagining and administering the immigrant population. Prakash shows that despite the French state's current reluctance to use race as an official category, racial thought and racial targets animated police services, social services, and urban planning schemes from the 1920s until
the 1970s.
Author Biography
Amit Prakash, Visiting Assistant Professor of International and Global Studies, Middlebury College
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