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Fast Capitalism

Abstract

This article critically engages with the emergence of police robots in the United States, arguing that their inevitable foray into everyday policing will fuel existing issues of racial discrimination. Building on Luis Suarez-Villa's (2009) conceptualization of technocapitalism, I situate police robots within a framework of social domination that thrives not only on its connections to corporatism and militarism, but also on technocapitalist conditions that invariably exacerbate the oppressive dynamics of racist and discriminatory policing. Although police robots will make police work safer for officers (Sharkey 2008), I contend that they will be used by the police as weaponized machines of racial discrimination.

Author Biography:

Constantine Gidaris, McMaster University

Contantine Gidaris has a PhD in Cultural Studies from McMaster University. His research interests include surveillance, policing, technology, race and robots.

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