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+====Twentieth century theories of policing has been revived – policing is seen as strictly reduced to criminology – crime and plain-clothes enforcement. This narrow-mindedness obfuscates the fluid structures of disciplinary power – ensuring the continuation of civility policing. This regulates the citizenry to uphold an ideal national community.==== |
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+Colleen **Bell,** 20**15** |
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+Bell is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Studies at the University of Saskatchewan, Canada. "The police power in counterinsurgencies – Discretion, patrolling and evidence" in "War, Police and Assemblages of Intervention", Edited by Jan Bachmann, Colleen Bell and Caroline Holmqvist, pg 174-176. |
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+The concept of police has a particular history. In the twentieth century the analysis |
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+AND |
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+official titles, a range of actors and institutions exercise the police power. |
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+====The affirmative's model of structural violence assumes a coherent subject. This idea produces the subject based on preconceived designs to uphold an idea that forms self-destruction when we can never reach it. ==== |
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+Stephen J. **Arnott,** 20**01** |
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+"Liminal Subjectivity and the Ethico-Aesthetic Paradigm of Felix Guattari", Limen 1/2001 – journal for theory and practice of liminal phenomena. |
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+First – no grounds empirically for complete subjecthood |
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+Second – subjectivity modeling enables new |
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+AND |
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+use of profanity and words such as incest, masochism and so on. |
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+====Liberal subject formation is predicated on the imperative uphold a peaceful order that is enacted by the erasure of political difference through unending war fought on the basis of justifying particular modes of life as normal. ==== |
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+Brad **Evans,** 20**10** |
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+Evans is a Lecturer in the School of Politics and International Studies at the University of Leeds and Programme Director for International Relations, "Foucault's Legacy: Security, War, and Violence in the 21st Century," Security Dialogue vol.41, no. 4, August 2010, pg. 422-424. |
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+Imposing liberalism has often come at a price. That price has tended to be |
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+AND |
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+underwrites the violence of contemporary liberal occupations is removed from the analytical arena. |
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+====Vote negative to embrace a methodology of vitalistic jurisprudence. Instead of a structural focus on governmentality, we present a bodily jurisprudence which focuses on processes of affectivity and the intensity of the subject. Such a bottom-up approach structures policy around the subject, preserving their complexity, and enabling a malleable yet political system.==== |
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+Claire **Colebrook et al,** 20**09** |
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+Claire Colebrook, Rosi Braidotti, and Patrick Hanafin, Colebrook is a professor of English at Penn State, Braidotti is a distinguished professor in the humanities at Utrecht University, and Hanafin is a professor of law at Birbeck University. "Rights of passage: law and the biopolitics of dying." In: Braidotti, R. and Colebrook, C. and Hanafin, Patrick (eds.) "Deleuze and Law: Forensic Futures." Basingstoke, UK: Macmillan Publishers Limited, pg. 1 |
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+This volume engages with the impact of a thinking of law with Gilles Deleuze. |
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+AND |
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+Protevi argues that Deleuze's ontology gives us tools to examine thresholds of viability. |
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+====The role of the ballot is to vote for who best methodologically actualizes affect.==== |
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+====Affects – or feelings and intensities – structure our world. Selfhood becomes shaped by external forces, ensuring a non-sovereign existence. Therefore, the cornerstone of ethics and possibility becomes based in our capacity to open ourselves to being both affected and affect others – you cannot chose how you relate or respond, you can only style your interactions.==== |
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+Michael **Hardt,** 20**15** |
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+Hardt is a professor of Literature and Italian at Duke University, he has written extensively on the work of Deleuze, Spinoza, Berlant, and other philosophers, he has also published a post-Marxist trilogy alongside Antonio Negri including the titles Empire, Commonwealth, and Multitude: War and Democracy in the Age of Empire. "The Power to be Affected" International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society Vol. 28, Issue 3, pg 215-222 |
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+Lauren Berlant's work is filled with explorations of the passions, the many ways in |
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+AND |
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+an equivalence between the two powers: to affect and to be affected. |