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Policing the Beats: Black music, racism and criminal injustice


ISBN13: 9781526171412
Published: March 2026
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback
Price: £14.99



Despatched in 9 to 11 days.

A bold analysis that exposes the racist policing of Black music.

The emergence of UK drill music made headline news, portraying it as a criminal enterprise instead of recognising it as an art form. This new rap subgenre, however, is neither the first nor the only Black music to be targeted this way.

Policing the beats rewinds the tape to demonstrate how music has been used as an instrument for policing Black people, from the era of colonial slavery to the present day, revealing the racist legal processes that make crimes out of rhymes.

This original and readable book offers the first in-depth account of the policing of Black music in Britain, highlighting the relationship between politics, culture and criminal (in)justice and inviting music lovers, scholars and activists to tune in.

Subjects:
Criminology
Contents:
Introduction

Part I: Is it even music? Policing Black music as 'out of tune' under British colonial rule
1. Cop-italism and slavery: excavating the colonial origins of British policing
2. Crude noise of a 'vile race': the danger of Black music(s)
3. Policing 'dangerous noise' one beat at a time
4. 'Salvation 'tis a joyful sound': a concluding coda

Part II: Does it belong here? Policing Black music as 'out of place' in postwar Britain
5. 'If you brown, they say you can't stick around': policing and cr-immigration in postwar Britain
6. (Don't) welcome to Britain
7. Racism runs riot
8. 'It gets me 'fraid when Babylon raid"'

Part III: Isn't it criminal? Black music as 'out of order' in contemporary Britain
9. To Be Black is a crime
10. Looking for 'crime' in grime
11. Blaming drill for making people kill
12. But isn't rap violent and misogynistic?

Part IV: Sounds radical: Black critique(s) of white reason
13. Who feels it, knows it: Black radical thought in sound
14. Who knows it, feels it: learning about criminal injustice from the policing of Black music(s)
15. Listen to this book: an annotated playlist
Postscript: of skinfolk and kinfolk: a rap on 'whiteness'

Index;