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Untrusting - by Marta-Laura Haynes
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Highlights
- What does it mean to trust in a world shaped by violence and inequality?
- About the Author: Marta-Laura Haynes is an assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York.
- 288 Pages
- Political Science, Law Enforcement
Description
About the Book
This book investigates the fraught pursuit of democratic policing in Brazil, where trust is both a necessity and a precarious gamble.
Book Synopsis
What does it mean to trust in a world shaped by violence and inequality? This book investigates the fraught pursuit of democratic policing in Brazil, where trust is both a necessity and a precarious gamble. Marta-Laura Haynes follows police officers and favela residents through patrols, crime scenes, fishing trips, drumming circles, and neighborhood gatherings to reveal how trust is not simply given or earned--but actively performed, negotiated, and also refused. These stories show how trust intersects with local ideas of citizenship, legitimacy, race, and power while also exposing the pervasive and often generative role of mistrust.
Far from being a stable foundation for democracy, trust in this context is a high-stakes wager, shaped by local hierarchies of race, gender, and class. In response, communities develop what Haynes calls "untrusting" a mode of engagement that refuses blind faith in the state and instead turns mistrust into a form of care, resistance, and survival. By illuminating the contradictions and complexities of trust in Brazil, Untrusting challenges reductive narratives of policing and offers a nuanced perspective on how democratic ideals are contested and reimagined by people on the ground. Challenging the idea that distrust is merely a barrier to progress, Haynes shows how it can be a resource for agency, dignity, and alternative visions of justice.
Review Quotes
Amidst instrumental efforts to make Brazilian police trustworthy, but which have spectacularly imploded, this vivid book speaks to a vital recognition: that even amidst the most troubled conditions, sociality, life and mutual survival--a modicum of trust--exists even amongst the most apparently disparate parties. And perhaps it must, if violent inequality is the history, the status quo, and the trajectory.--Graham Denyer Willis, author of Keep the Bones Alive: Missing People and the Search for Life in Brazil
A joy to read, this engaging, thought-provoking, and well-written book investigates democratic policing and efforts by law enforcement agencies to build trust with residents of favela communities in Recife and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Marta-Laura Haynes's intersectional conceptualization of the dynamics of trust and mistrust links race, gender, citizenship, and class, with broad applications beyond policing to other domains of study concerning security and insecurity around the world.--Marcos Mendoza, author of The Patagonian Sublime: The Green Economy and Post-Neoliberal Politics
Marta-Laura Haynes's fabulous ethnography presents a nuanced view of life in the favelas. All groups involved are portrayed with depth and care, showing not just their actions but the deeper unsettling challenges of policing and public trust. Untrusting is a significant contribution to understanding policing, gender, violence and sexuality.--Jeremy Slack, author of Deported to Death: How Drug Violence Is Changing Migration on the US-Mexico Border
About the Author
Marta-Laura Haynes is an assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York.