| keywords |
police, and, Guadeloupe;, Race, Gendarmerie;, Policing;, Management, French, Carribean, Post-Colonial, Deviance; |
| abstract |
corruption in the French overseas territories, drawing on the cas of Guadeloupe, a French overseas territory marked by social, political and economical marginalization and post-colonial tensions. Based on ethnographic research conducted within local law enforcement institutions, it highlights a striking paradox: while the frequency of observed misconduct was similar to that found in mainland France, police leaders unanimously framed such deviance as exceptionally prevalent and problematic in the French West Indies. This perception, often explained by social sciences as a result of the structural constraints of police work, was instead attributed by police chiefs to the territory’s post-colonial context and internal institutional dynamics. The article investigates those chiefs—whose viewpoints were marked by strong social homogeneity—construct and disseminate racialized narratives of “Guadeloupean deviance,” as a form of deviance perceived as both problematic and functional in sustaining the legitimacy of the French state’s presence in the territory. Building on the tradition of French police sociology, this study addresses a largely unexplored area: corruption and misconduct in the overseas territories. It reveals how colonial legacies continue to shape internal policing practices and institutional representations, with enduring effects on power relations, racialized authority, and the maintenance of the French state in its former colonies. |