"A timely and hugely important book. South Africa faces a crisis in policing and Guy Lamb tells us why. We are shaped by where we come from and understanding police disfunction today means we need to understand how its work is fundamentally framed by social and territorial boundaries."
Jakkie Cilliers, Founder and Chairperson of the Board, Institute for Security Studies, South Africa
"Guy Lamb offers pioneering explorations into ’police frontierism’ as a concept of ‘law and order’ based on fencing off rather than integrating communities. A must read for all interested in post-Apartheid policing, pointing to the historic and regional legacies of present securitisation beyond the borders of South African society."
Prof. Henning Melber, University of Pretoria / University of the Free State, Bloemfontein / Nordic Africa Institute, Uppsala
"Guy Lamb's insightful unearthing of a pervasive, yet strangely neglected, feature of police and policing -- the maintenance of boundaries and frontiers -- could not have come at a more prescient time, as police across the globe have been deployed to enforce ‘physical distancing’ in managing COVID-19."
Prof. Clifford Shearing, Universities of Cape Town, Griffith and Montreal
"Guy Lamb’s compelling and detailed account of police frontierism not only showcases the disturbing historical continuities of police boundary work from colonial to contemporary times, but also provides new insights on the use of police violence in governing ‘othered’ spaces – a timely contribution in light of the challenges of policing the COVID pandemic."
Dr Julie Berg, University of Glasgow, UK
Introduction
1. Boundaries, the police and police work: A conceptualisation
2. Policing and boundaries in South African prior to 1948
3. The South African Police and the Policing of Apartheid
4. Violent crime, firearms and post-apartheid police work
5. Public Order Policing
6. SAPS high-density policing operations
7. COVID and policing in South Africa
8. Conclusion
Guy Lamb is a Criminologist with the Department of Political Science at Stellenbosch University in South Africa. Between 2012 and 2020 he was the Director of the Safety and Violence Initiative at the University of Cape Town. Prior to this he was a Senior Research Fellow at the Institute for Security Studies (2006-2012), and Senior Researcher at the Centre for Conflict Resolution (2000-2005). He has undertaken research and published on policing, violence reduction, urban safety, policing and peace-building issues in Africa for more than 20 years. He has worked with numerous governments and various United Nations agencies on violence and security issues.