Description: In this edited volume contributors from around the world ponder the complicated relationships between LGBTQ+ communities and police and law enforcement using intersectional analysis of innovative topics, contemporary issues, and individual experiences.
Review Quotes:
"Q Policing is the first volume to fully explore the rich and complex intersections between sexuality, gender diversity, and policing. International in its scope and intersectional in its approach, the authors canvass a wide array of original topics spanning from the policing of queer lives, protest, and kink, to organizational analyses of police bodies, and even to the experiences of queer people serving as police officers. No volume to date has unpacked these threads in such detail or with such nuance. Q Policing is a very welcome addition to queer studies in criminology and criminal justice, and a necessary read."--Matthew Ball, author of Criminology and Queer Theory: Dangerous Bedfellows?
"Q Policing covers the diverse LGBTQ+ experiences with law enforcement systems over the last five decades, from abolition to reform to employment. This interdisciplinary collection provides a contemporary analysis that highlights growing sexuality and gender identities. Their category 'criminal processing system' pushes criminology to acknowledge the limited role of 'justice' in these institutions across the world."--Andrew R. Spieldenner, editor of A Pill for Promiscuity: Gay Sex in an Age of Pharmaceuticals "Readers of this volume will come away with a clear understanding of the challenges, changes, and progress that are occurring between LGBTQ+ communities and law enforcement. The book is a must-read for all individuals trying to understand the complexities that have plagued the police community and LGBTQ+ community from working together over the decades."--Richard Greggory Johnson III, coeditor of Unheard Voices: A Collection of Narratives by Black, Gay and Bisexual Men "Q Policing is a welcome addition to queer criminological literature. Colvin, Dwyer, and Giwa have brought together an impressive cadre of scholars, offering a unique and global collection of essays that explore the intersectional experiences of queer people who have come into contact with law enforcement and/or who work as police officers themselves."--Emily Lenning, coauthor of Queer Criminology