Rethinking the philosophical grounds of police power, Melayna Lamb
argues that traditional ideas of sovereignty and the law need to be
radically re-evaluated. In placing police at the centre of analysis this
book demonstrates the manner in which police power exists in a complex
and overlapping relationship with sovereignty and law in a form which is
not reducible to implementation. In doing this it argues for the
centrality of order in any consideration of police and challenging a
common narrative whereby a dynamic, interventionist sovereign power that
follows from a belief of order as 'artificial' is replaced by a liberal,
limited non-interventionist sovereign power that proceeds from a
'natural' order. Moving through thinkers such as Hobbes, Hegel and Adam
Smith the book argues that police power is in fact an-archic in form,
in a manner that makes it impossible to hold accountable through the
law.
Lamb adopts an interdisciplinary approach that turns to philosophy to
make sense of global events that see police power at their centre. This
includes the history of police brutality in the US, the structural
injustices made more apparent by COVID-19 and the growing calls to
abolish the police.