A representative workforce: the BME police recruitment target and the politics of enumeration and categorization

Murji, Karim ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7490-7906 (2014) A representative workforce: the BME police recruitment target and the politics of enumeration and categorization. International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, 34 (9/10). pp. 578-592. ISSN 0144-333X

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Abstract

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the inter-relationship between target setting, racial categories and racism via the case of a race employment target set for the police. Drawing on and extending public administration and governmentality perspectives, the work explores the shifting politics of enumeration and categorisation within a set of organisational manoeuvres.

Design/methodology/approach – The data are qualitative and mainly based on interviews with senior figures involved in managing the organisational response to the target, as well as some documentary sources.

Findings – The discussion reveals that both racial enumeration and categorisation are contested rather than fixed, but that debates about it ebb and flow in variable and uneven ways. They are the subject of manoeuvring around the number itself and of what counts as race. This indicates the complexity of governing race targets, which appear set but are made fluid in various ways.

Research limitations/implications – The research is based on interviews with senior and prominent figures involved in governance who spoke “off the record”, as described in the paper. These conversations are not in the public domain and the justification for using them is that they reveal the thinking behind the public debate about the black and minority ethnic (BME) target, as well as a process of negotiation and manoeuvring.

Originality/value – The BME target has been the subject of considerable media and political attention, plus some academic research. The paper presents a new and unique account of the target as it was implemented. It is of value to researchers interested in racism and policing interested in the organisational background that shaped the public debates about the target.

Item Type: Article
Identifier: 10.1108/IJSSP-01-2013-0011
Keywords: Governance, Race, Racism, Policing, London, Targets
Subjects: Law and criminal justice > Criminal justice
Law and criminal justice
Law and criminal justice > Criminal justice > Policing and criminal investigations
Social sciences
Depositing User: Karim Murji
Date Deposited: 13 Oct 2017 09:53
Last Modified: 06 Feb 2024 15:54
URI: https://repository.uwl.ac.uk/id/eprint/4031

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