This paper takes up an ethically challenging position: it argues that it may be useful to explore how ‘queering’ heteronormative embodiment in public space may lead to certain types of policing practices. It argues that policing may involve ways of ‘reading’ particular bodies as ‘queering’ heteronormative ways of doing subjectivity, and that this may have implications for queer communities more broadly. In doing this, the paper challenges policing as somehow impartial by suggesting that more could be done for queer communities. Informed by literature about heteronormative police culture, hate crimes and embodiment, police-queer relationships, and ethical policing practices, this paper brings together these discomforting issues and suggests they are explicitly important for policing young people that ‘queer’ heteronormativity. The paper concludes with a call for ‘embodying’ criminological research to produce ethicalpolicing practices with queer communities.
History
Publication title
QUT Law & Justice Journal
Volume
8
Pagination
414-428
ISSN
2201-7275
Department/School
School of Social Sciences
Publisher
Queensland University of Technology Faculty of Law
Place of publication
Australia
Rights statement
Copyright 2008 The Authors Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Australia (CC BY 3.0 AU) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/au/deed.en_GB