Classify, Exclude, Police. Laurent Fourchard

Classify, Exclude, Police - Laurent Fourchard


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2826 1866 1891 1904 1951 1960 1970 1996 2011 Johannesburg — 3 327 969 1247 1561 2638 4434 Cape Town 22 51 77 500 803 1300 2565 3740

      From the early twentieth century onwards, South African labour policies divided workers into two separate groups: on one hand, a category of urban workers who were to be made into stable residents by granting them rights related to housing, employment and family life, and on the other, a population of temporary migrants destined to return to the countryside once their labour contracts were completed. For the members of this second group, the hostel* – or more precisely the assignment of a bed (‘bedhold’) – became the institution structuring their daily lives, as well as relationships with their employers and administrative authorities, fellow workers at the hostel, apparently favoured neighbours living nearby in family quarters and women whose unauthorised residence depended on the goodwill of the men to whom they had to be attached (Ramphele 1993). During the same period, labour policies in Nigeria led to the creation of a new category of urban resident called ‘non‐native’ – defined in opposition to ‘native’ – which was the norm at the time. These policies authorised the presence of migrants needed by the colonial economy, but required them to reside in reserved neighbourhoods and placed them under a separate authority to avoid diminishing the power of native chiefs.

      In the 1930s, new security apparatuses were also developed by non‐state actors at the neighbourhood level. After identifying the most obvious threats, local organisations in South Africa and Nigeria introduced schemes for policing everyday life in low‐income districts. These actors were given substantial power for the reason that the authorities had neither the resources nor a compelling need to ensure a police presence in areas that played a minimal role in the colonial economy. Such organisations acquired considerable operational autonomy and, in some respects, actually governed the neighbourhood, especially at night. They were free to use undue violence against unruly youths or ‘foreigners’ whose access to the neighbourhood was regulated after certain hours. By drawing the boundaries between insiders to be integrated and outsiders, they built a political community at the neighbourhood level.

      These organisations or their successors still operate in the two countries today, but their modus operandi has been partly transformed. The violence is perhaps better regulated nowadays; corporal punishment no longer enjoys the same legitimacy, and it has become more discreet or rare but it has not disappeared. Neighbourhood policing organisations have become more bureaucratised, politicised and, in some cases, feminised. They now charge low rates for their services, rather than performing them for free. But, as in the colonial period, policing still consists in identifying specific threats to neighbourhood cohesion and controlling target populations.

      By exploring these varied apparatuses, we can measure the effects of classifying populations in terms of exclusion and inclusion, the violence they sometimes engendered, and the forms of social differentiation they brought about. For example, one might examine how state agents identified and analysed different (or similar) problems in Kano, Lagos, Cape Town and Johannesburg and how this process led to policies that simultaneously altered the limits of the state, claimed to govern conduct and produced social differentiation; or we might look at why the relationships between political bosses and their clients in Ibadan and Lagos, which for many years were quite similar, began moving in different directions in recent times, conditioning the violent (or non‐violent)


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