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Accepted Paper:

Suffocating Care: Police as Social Workers in Turkey  
Hayal Akarsu (Utrecht University)

Paper short abstract:

The Turkish National Police underwent intensive reforms during the 2000s, which generated a range of social projects. Such projects often felt like suffocating care, which I take as an analytic to explore how populist authoritarianism builds new relational space for state-citizen encounters.

Paper long abstract:

The Turkish National Police underwent intensive reforms during the 2000s, which generated a range of social projects implemented across different police units with the support of other governmental branches focusing on social policies, welfare and social security. These projects helped police experiment with new, mostly sensorial, policing methods in addition to teaching people how to see and feel like the police. People became subjects of proactive policing projects, and their homes became laboratories of emergent state care. Policing through social projects often felt like suffocating care, especially for regular recipients of social assistance. Based on 18 months of ethnographic research between 2015-2017 in different social settings, from police stations to home visits, the talk analyzes the convergence of a service-oriented bureaucratic ethos with a populist appeal to serve 'the people'. I take 'suffocating care' as an analytic to explore how populist authoritarianism makes inroad to everyday life and builds new relational space for state-citizen encounters.

Panel P016
Relational States: New Directions in the Anthropology of the State [Anthropologies of the State Network]
  Session 1 Wednesday 22 July, 2020, -