
@article{ref1,
title="Geographies of death: an intersectional analysis of police lethality and the racialized regimes of citizenship in São Paulo",
journal="Ethnic and racial studies",
year="2010",
author="Vargas, João Costa and Amparo Alves, Jaime",
volume="33",
number="4",
pages="611-611",
abstract="This paper presents an intersectional analysis of police lethality in the city of Sao Paulo. We deploy the concept of geography of death to investigate the multi-layered aspects of state-sanctioned lethal violence perpetrated by, but not limited to, the police force. This entails a consideration of at least three types of factor: actual violent acts, their symbolic dimensions and the historical and structural conditions within which violence emerges. Based on official data from the Brazilian state we argue that there is a perverse correlation between vulnerability to death and new racial formations, as they intersect with social class, age, gender, and place. Thus, the distinctive social geographies of Sao Paulo not only provide the context, but also define the very nature, frequency and experience of police violence. Ultimately, we argue, police lethality is a manifestation of the police and the state's complicity in reproducing boundaries of privilege and exclusion.<p />",
language="",
issn="0141-9870",
doi="10.1080/01419870903325636",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01419870903325636"
}