dc.contributor.author
Jiménez-Franco, Daniel
dc.contributor.author
Aguerri, Jesús C.
dc.contributor.author
Forero Cuéllar, Alejandro
dc.date.accessioned
2026-02-28T20:42:49Z
dc.date.available
2026-02-28T20:42:49Z
dc.date.issued
2026-02-26T14:51:14Z
dc.date.issued
2026-02-26T14:51:14Z
dc.date.issued
2023-07-04
dc.date.issued
2026-02-26T14:51:14Z
dc.identifier
https://hdl.handle.net/2445/227540
dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/2445/227540
dc.description.abstract
This article presents a discussion concerning the role of police rationale(s) in Spain within the context of the Covid-19 pandemic, where exceptionalist strategies aimed at curtailing the spread of the virus came to dramatically strengthen existing social divisions. In line with some authors who have already approached this phenomenon from different disciplines, our premise is that most serious emergencies boosted by Covid-19 were not a mere matter of public health, but rather a particularly harmful expression of accumulation by dispossession. Thus, rather than a flaw in the system produced by an exceptional friction between public security and public health, securitarian performances deployed by neoliberal states can be read as symbiotic strategies, from both law and order and business as usual approaches, to manage the social “externalities” of capitalist predatory strategies. As we will argue, phenomena such as the reinforcement of the policing consensus, police production of law, or the authoritarian turn favored by the Covid-19 health crisis must all be analyzed in this context.
dc.format
application/pdf
dc.publisher
Springer Nature
dc.relation
Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10612-023-09702-y
dc.relation
Critical Criminology, 2023, num.31, p. 363-378
dc.relation
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10612-023-09702-y
dc.rights
cc-by Alejandro Forero Cuéllar et al., 2023
dc.rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.rights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.subject
Pandèmia de COVID-19, 2020-2023
dc.subject
Control social
dc.subject
Gestió d'emergències
dc.subject
COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- 2023
dc.subject
Social control
dc.subject
Emergency management
dc.subject
Authoritarianism
dc.title
Off-the-Cuff Law-Making: Policing Pandemic Dispossession in Spain
dc.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
dc.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersion