Before the Badge: How Academy Training Shapes Police Violence
Samantha J. Simon
(Author)
21,000+ Reviews
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Description
An inside look at how police officers are trained to perpetuate state violence
Michael Brown. Philando Castile. George Floyd. Breonna Taylor. As the names of those killed by the police became cemented into public memory, the American public took to the streets in unprecedented numbers to mourn, organize, and demand changes to the current system of policing. In response, police departments across the country committed themselves to change, pledging to hire more women and people of color, incorporate diversity training, and instruct officers to verbally de-escalate interactions with the public. These reform efforts tend to rely on a "bad apple" argument, focusing the nature and scope of the problem on the behavior of specific individuals and rarely considering the broader organizational process that determines who is allowed to patrol the public and how they learn to do their jobs. In Before the Badge, Samantha J. Simon provides a firsthand look into how police officers are selected and trained, describing every stage of the process, including recruitment, classroom instruction, and tactical training. Simon spent a year at police academies participating in the training alongside cadets, giving her a visceral, hands-on understanding of how police training operates. Using rich and detailed examples, she reveals that the process does more than test a cadet's physical or intellectual abilities. Instead, it socializes cadets into a system of state violence. As training progresses, cadets are expected to see themselves as warriors and to view Black and Latino/a members of the public as their enemies. Cadets who cannot or will not uphold this approach end up washing out. In Before the Badge, Simon explains how this training creates a context in which patterns of police violence persist and implores readers to re-envision the future of policing in the United States.Product Details
Price
$31.85
Publisher
New York University Press
Publish Date
March 05, 2024
Pages
304
Dimensions
6.0 X 9.1 X 1.3 inches | 1.3 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781479813278
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Become an affiliateAbout the Author
Samantha J. Simon is Assistant Professor in the School of Government & Public Policy and the School of Sociology at The University of Arizona. Her writing has appeared in The Atlantic, among other outlets.
Reviews
"Before the Badge is a remarkable ethnography that reveals the socialization process of state violence at work within policy academy training. Simon compellingly shows the violent ethos that shapes the selection and training of cadets, and police organizations that embrace a worldview that pits the police against the public. Her innovative research makes clear the necessity for a broader vision of justice that relies less on policing and more on community building."-- "Jennifer Cobbina-Dungy, author of Hands Up, Don't Shoot: Why the Protests in Ferguson and Baltimore Matter, and How They Changed America"
"Simon's remarkable fieldwork reveals how the institutional culture of policing is shaped by recruitment and training procedures that make us all less safe; a must-read for anyone who thinks we can fix American policing with more training."-- "Alex S. Vitale, author of The End of Policing"
"Simon has crafted a richly detailed, emotionally intelligent, and historically informed account of how human beings are transformed into cops. Before the Badge is a noteworthy addition to the all-too-sparse annals of effective ethnography exploring day-to-day human life within the carceral state."-- "Jarrod Shanahan, author of Captives: How Rikers Island Took New York City Hostage and co-author of States of Incarceration"
"This is a brilliant book! Through careful research and compelling writing, Simon shows how racial violence by police officers is organizationally produced, enabled, and sustained. This is an incredibly important and timely book that should be required reading for policymakers, advocates, and the public interested in prospects for police reform. Contemporary American policing is steeped in a long history of racial violence and racial injustice and to overcome it, Simon argues, will require a fundamental reorganization of American policing itself."-- "Becky Pettit, author of Invisible Men: Mass Incarceration and the Myth of Black Progress"
"Simon has conducted a detailed, intricate, and nuanced ethnographic study in which she immerses herself in the police academy training process to shed light on how officers are taught to utilize and, simultaneously, develop apprehension toward violence. This book goes beyond providing rich description; it presents brilliant theoretical insights that aid in comprehending the underlying factors contributing to police harassment and violence, revealing the hidden facets of racialized punitive social control"-- "Victor Rios, author of Punished: Policing the Lives of Black and Latino Boys"
"Simon brings her subject to life, and her rapport with the officers and cadets reads as genuine. A troubling, nuanced report on the way American police academies train their graduates in the use of force."-- "Kirkus Reviews"
"[A] blistering debut study... posits that these training programs make police abuse an inevitability. Readers will come away aghast at the scope of the problem. This trenchant study of the institutional origins of police violence deserves a wide readership."-- "Publishers Weekly, STARRED"
"Simon's remarkable fieldwork reveals how the institutional culture of policing is shaped by recruitment and training procedures that make us all less safe; a must-read for anyone who thinks we can fix American policing with more training."-- "Alex S. Vitale, author of The End of Policing"
"Simon has crafted a richly detailed, emotionally intelligent, and historically informed account of how human beings are transformed into cops. Before the Badge is a noteworthy addition to the all-too-sparse annals of effective ethnography exploring day-to-day human life within the carceral state."-- "Jarrod Shanahan, author of Captives: How Rikers Island Took New York City Hostage and co-author of States of Incarceration"
"This is a brilliant book! Through careful research and compelling writing, Simon shows how racial violence by police officers is organizationally produced, enabled, and sustained. This is an incredibly important and timely book that should be required reading for policymakers, advocates, and the public interested in prospects for police reform. Contemporary American policing is steeped in a long history of racial violence and racial injustice and to overcome it, Simon argues, will require a fundamental reorganization of American policing itself."-- "Becky Pettit, author of Invisible Men: Mass Incarceration and the Myth of Black Progress"
"Simon has conducted a detailed, intricate, and nuanced ethnographic study in which she immerses herself in the police academy training process to shed light on how officers are taught to utilize and, simultaneously, develop apprehension toward violence. This book goes beyond providing rich description; it presents brilliant theoretical insights that aid in comprehending the underlying factors contributing to police harassment and violence, revealing the hidden facets of racialized punitive social control"-- "Victor Rios, author of Punished: Policing the Lives of Black and Latino Boys"
"Simon brings her subject to life, and her rapport with the officers and cadets reads as genuine. A troubling, nuanced report on the way American police academies train their graduates in the use of force."-- "Kirkus Reviews"
"[A] blistering debut study... posits that these training programs make police abuse an inevitability. Readers will come away aghast at the scope of the problem. This trenchant study of the institutional origins of police violence deserves a wide readership."-- "Publishers Weekly, STARRED"