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Lecture notes

State Violence

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Overview of State Violence for Violent Crime exam.

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  • June 4, 2022
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  • 2021/2022
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  • Dr andrea varsori
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State Violence

What is State Violence?
 Literally, it is the use of violence by the state
 “Violence” can mean both its use and the threat of it
- Violence can be psychological too
- The literature uses the term “violence” to indicate other forms of non-physical
damage: symbolic violence, structural violence…
- Only physical and psychological violence
 “The state” is an entity composed of several sectors and organisations
- Police forces
- Armed forces
- Judiciary branch
- Prison system

Use of Violence by the State
 State and violence are inseparably linked
 The most popular and commonly accepted definition of the state was written by Max
Weber in 1919:
- The state is the “only human community within a certain territory that claims the
monopoly on the use of legitimate physical force.” (Weber 2015, 136)
 The monopoly on (legitimate) violence is a state’s fundamental element!
 The state decides on the laws within a particular territory and then enforces them,
through police forces and the criminal justice system
 The state can also defend its monopoly against external and internal competitors,
through the armed forces and the police
- Internal & external sovereignty
 The use of violence underlies a state’s fiscal capacity
 The use of force effectively allows the extraction of taxes from individuals living in
the state’s territory
 Without use of force, some (or most?) people would probably not pay taxes and the
state would not gather as many resources as it does now

Historical Relations between State + Violence
 The link between state and violence is apparent when looking at modern history
 States have been built through violence, and more precisely through war-making
(Tilly 1985)
 Violence had the double effect of helping to impose state rule on a territory and
forcing the state to establish armies, bureaucracies, and taxation
 Modern states emerge in Western Europe in the 1500s, and since then they have
used violence and other means to achieve a territorial monopoly on the use of
violence
 At the same time, states have spread from Europe to the rest of the world through
imperialism and emulation
 The whole surface of the world now belongs to states
 This makes state violence a pervasive feature of life

, State Violence + State Crime
 In most cases, the state gets to define what constitutes crime and what does not
 How likely it is that the state will prosecute itself?
 Remember though that the state is not a unitary actor – it is made up of several
organisations…
- … some of which may have an interest in accusing and prosecuting the others
 Who can accuse a state of committing a (violent) crime?
- International society (other states, the international community in general)
- Civil society
- NGOs (Amnesty International, Transparency International, Human Rights
Watch…)

Legitimate State Violence?
 The issue of “legitimacy” is also fundamental in deciding whether a state committed
a crime
 Weber: the state possesses a monopoly on the legitimate use of force
 If an act of violence is deemed legitimate, it will be considered as permissible and
just – and thus it will not be considered as a crime
 Where does legitimacy come from?
- Self-defence: the state was defending itself from foreign aggression
- Democracy: state officials answer to the people
- Human rights: the state uses violence compatibly with the respect of
fundamental human rights
- Culture: the state represents a community bound by common language, history,
and culture (nation-state)
 Who decides on legitimacy?
 Two main options:
- External audience: the international community
- Internal audience: the public opinion + the state itself (for example, its judiciary
branch)
 As a general rule, three main activities involving violence are considered legitimate
uses of force (Green and Ward 2009, 164)
- Policing (self-explanatory, although police overreach and/or militarisation are
real concerns)
- Punishment (and so the operation of the judiciary branch and the prison system)
- Warfare (and so the operation of the armed forces)
 This doctrine is universal by nature and is enshrined in several fundamental
international legal documents (such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights)
 Notice however that this doctrine can be instrumentalised and is not closely applied
by the international community
- “Exporting democracy” …
- China in the UN Human Rights Council…

State Violence Now
 Every part of the world belongs to a state
 Some states are much less functional than others (“failed states”, “ungoverned
areas”)

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