TY - BOOK ID - 80836219 TI - Race, place, and suburban policing PY - 2015 SN - 9780520958081 052095808X 9780520282384 9780520282391 0520282388 0520282396 PB - Oakland, California DB - UniCat KW - African Americans -- Missouri -- Kirkwood -- Social conditions. KW - Police-community relations -- Missouri -- Kirkwood. KW - Police-community relations KW - African Americans KW - Police KW - Racism in criminology KW - Criminology KW - Cops KW - Gendarmes KW - Law enforcement officers KW - Officers, Law enforcement KW - Officers, Police KW - Police forces KW - Police officers KW - Police service KW - Policemen KW - Policing KW - Criminal justice, Administration of KW - Criminal justice personnel KW - Peace officers KW - Public safety KW - Security systems KW - Afro-Americans KW - Black Americans KW - Colored people (United States) KW - Negroes KW - Africans KW - Ethnology KW - Blacks KW - Public relations KW - Social conditions KW - Legal status, laws, etc. KW - Black people KW - african americans. KW - american politics. KW - black americans. KW - charles cookie thornton. KW - critical analysis. KW - critical race theory. KW - democracy. KW - gun violence. KW - kevin johnson. KW - marginalized communities. KW - nationally profiled shootings. KW - police citizen interface. KW - police shootings. KW - police violence. KW - police. KW - policing literature. KW - politics. KW - race theory. KW - race. KW - racialized policing. KW - racism in america. KW - racism in the united states. KW - racism. KW - reconciliation. KW - social injustice. KW - suburban communities. KW - united states of america. KW - urban communities. KW - violence. UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:80836219 AB - While considerable attention has been given to encounters between black citizens and police in urban communities, there have been limited analyses of such encounters in suburban settings. Race, Place, and Suburban Policing tells the full story of social injustice, racialized policing, nationally profiled shootings, and the ambiguousness of black life in a suburban context. Through compelling interviews, participant observation, and field notes from a marginalized black enclave located in a predominately white suburb, Andrea S. Boyles examines a fraught police-citizen interface, where blacks are segregated and yet forced to negotiate overlapping spaces with their more affluent white counterparts. ER -