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POLICE WORK IN GHANA - Producing Stateness: Police Work in Ghana. By Jan Beek. Leiden: Brill, 2016. Pp. viii + 237. $84.00, paperback (ISBN: 978-90-04-33217-1); $84.00, e-book (ISBN: 978-90-04-33490-8).

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Producing Stateness: Police Work in Ghana. By Jan Beek. Leiden: Brill, 2016. Pp. viii + 237. $84.00, paperback (ISBN: 978-90-04-33217-1); $84.00, e-book (ISBN: 978-90-04-33490-8).

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 March 2020

JOËL GLASMAN*
Affiliation:
University of Bayreuth

Abstract

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Type
Reviews of Books
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press

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References

1 On police anthropology, see M. Göpfert, ‘Bureaucratic aesthetics: report writing in the Nigérien gendarmerie’, American Ethnologist, 40 (2013), 324–34; J. Steinberg, Thin Blue: The Unwritten Rules of Policing South Africa (Johannesburg, 2008); J. Hornberger, Policing and Human Rights: The Meaning of Violence and Justice in the Everyday Policing of Johannesburg (London, 2013); S. Biecker and K. Schlichte, ‘Between governance and domination: the everyday life of Uganda's police forces’, in L. Koechlin and T. Förster (eds.), The Politics of Governance: Actors and Articulations in Africa and Beyond (London, 2015), 93–114. On the anthropology of stateness, see J. P. Olivier de Sardan and T. Bierschenk (eds.), States at Work: Dynamics of African Bureaucracies (Leiden, 2014).