Description

Book Synopsis
The United States has poured over a billion dollars into a network of interagency intelligence centers called fusion centers. These centers were ostensibly set up to prevent terrorism, but politicians, the press, and policy advocates have criticized them for failing on this account. So why do these security systems persist? Pacifying the Homeland travels inside the secret world of intelligence fusion, looks beyond the apparent failure of fusion centers, and reveals a broader shift away from mass incarceration and toward a more surveillance- and police-intensive system of social regulation. Provided with unprecedented access to domestic intelligence centers, Brendan McQuade uncovers how the institutionalization of intelligence fusion enables decarceration without fully addressing the underlying social problems at the root of mass incarceration. The result is a startling analysis that contributes to the debates on surveillance, mass incarceration, and policing and challenges readers to see surveillance, policing, mass incarceration, and the security state in an entirely new light.

Trade Review
"Through comprehensive research, McQuade offers a substantial contribution to studies in policing, surveillance, historical sociology, and social justice. . . . As the book makes clear, “mass supervision, an outgrowth and extension of mass incarceration, helps maintain the stark—and starkly racialized—inequalities that characterize the United States." Understanding intelligence fusion and mass supervision is necessary to challenge such conditions, an effort Pacifying the Homeland contributes to greatly." * Journal of Criminal Justice Education *
"Pacifying the Homeland is part of a wave of much needed critical policing studies that at once echo an earlier era in the study of radical criminology, while also heralding the arrival of a new interventionist, unapologetic structural analysis of policing." * Punishment & Society *
"This is a vitally important book." * Religious Studies Review *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments

Prologue: Policing Camden’s crisis

1. Connecting the dots beyond counterterrorism and seeing past organizational failure
2. The rise and present demise of the workfare-carceral state
3. The institutionalization of intelligence fusion
4. Policing decarceration
5. Beyond cointelpro
6. Pacifying poverty
Conclusion: The Camden model and the Chicago
challenge

Appendix: Research and the World of Official Secrets
Notes
Works Cited
Index

Pacifying the Homeland Intelligence Fusion and

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A Paperback / softback by Brendan McQuade

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    View other formats and editions of Pacifying the Homeland Intelligence Fusion and by Brendan McQuade

    Publisher: University of California Press
    Publication Date: 06/08/2019
    ISBN13: 9780520299757, 978-0520299757
    ISBN10: 0520299752

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    The United States has poured over a billion dollars into a network of interagency intelligence centers called fusion centers. These centers were ostensibly set up to prevent terrorism, but politicians, the press, and policy advocates have criticized them for failing on this account. So why do these security systems persist? Pacifying the Homeland travels inside the secret world of intelligence fusion, looks beyond the apparent failure of fusion centers, and reveals a broader shift away from mass incarceration and toward a more surveillance- and police-intensive system of social regulation. Provided with unprecedented access to domestic intelligence centers, Brendan McQuade uncovers how the institutionalization of intelligence fusion enables decarceration without fully addressing the underlying social problems at the root of mass incarceration. The result is a startling analysis that contributes to the debates on surveillance, mass incarceration, and policing and challenges readers to see surveillance, policing, mass incarceration, and the security state in an entirely new light.

    Trade Review
    "Through comprehensive research, McQuade offers a substantial contribution to studies in policing, surveillance, historical sociology, and social justice. . . . As the book makes clear, “mass supervision, an outgrowth and extension of mass incarceration, helps maintain the stark—and starkly racialized—inequalities that characterize the United States." Understanding intelligence fusion and mass supervision is necessary to challenge such conditions, an effort Pacifying the Homeland contributes to greatly." * Journal of Criminal Justice Education *
    "Pacifying the Homeland is part of a wave of much needed critical policing studies that at once echo an earlier era in the study of radical criminology, while also heralding the arrival of a new interventionist, unapologetic structural analysis of policing." * Punishment & Society *
    "This is a vitally important book." * Religious Studies Review *

    Table of Contents
    Acknowledgments

    Prologue: Policing Camden’s crisis

    1. Connecting the dots beyond counterterrorism and seeing past organizational failure
    2. The rise and present demise of the workfare-carceral state
    3. The institutionalization of intelligence fusion
    4. Policing decarceration
    5. Beyond cointelpro
    6. Pacifying poverty
    Conclusion: The Camden model and the Chicago
    challenge

    Appendix: Research and the World of Official Secrets
    Notes
    Works Cited
    Index

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