Violence, Imagination, and Resistance
Socio-Legal Interrogations of Power
Athabasca University Press
For some time, scholars have devoted considerable attention to the law as a force of repression, one that replicates and enforces structural inequalities through violence and legally sanctioned modes of punishment. But it is the means by which the law functions as a tool of governmentality that occupies the contributors to this volume. Through the exploration of how to deconstruct law’s power, how to expose the violence the law produces, and finally how to identify modes of resistance that have transformative potential, these essays contribute to the ongoing interrogation of settler colonialism, racism, and structural violence in Canada.
Mariful Alam and Patrick Dwyer are PhD candidates at York University in the socio-legal studies program. Katrin Roots is assistant professor in the Department of Criminology at Wilfrid Laurier University