ICCJ Fall Colloquium: Modulating eventfulness, mitigating potentiality: Examining the political work of police liaison teams in Ontario
ICCJ Fall Colloquium: Modulating eventfulness, mitigating potentiality: Examining the political work of police liaison teams in Ontario
Categories: General, Indigenous, Lectures and Seminars | Intended for Alumni, Anyone, Current Students, Faculty, Media, Prospective Students, Staff, Staff/Faculty
2017 Dunton Tower
1125 Colonel By Dr, Ottawa, ON
Contact Information
Lara Karaian, 613-520-2600 x 1458, lara.karaian@carleton.ca
Registration
Cost
$0
About this Event
Host Organization: Institute of Criminology and Criminal Justice
More Information: Please click here for additional details.
The Institute of Criminology and Criminal Justice invites you to our Fall Colloquium, co-sponsored by the Department of Geography and Environmental Studies.
For this talk, "Modulating Eventfulness, Mitigating Potentiality: Examining the Political Work of Police Liaison Teams in Ontario," SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellow, Paul Sylvestre, examines the relationship between Police Liaison Teams, protest, space, and territorializing settler state power.
Police Liaison Teams (PLT) have become a primary vehicle to manage Indigenous land defence actions and mass demonstrations. A complex blend of pre-emptive policing and community policing, police liaison interventions extend well beyond the spatio-temporal confines of a given protest event. In this talk, Paul Sylvestre adopts a critical geographic perspective on the relationship between space and event to discuss the proliferation of police liaison strategies and to examine the ways in which PLTs territorialize settler state power and subtly reconfigure the political terrain over which political dissent is organized.
Register For this Event
45 spaces capacity, 45 spot(s) left.