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The papers collected on this panel show how organizations interpret and resist federal visa regulations; how commissions vs. direct access manage human rights claims; how prosecutors construct the boundaries of what constitute violence; how state governments use surcharges and fees as citizen discipline; how police liability is interpreted via risk, insurance and neo-liberal governance models.
Boundaries of Violence: How Prosecutors Decide Between Violent and Nonviolent Charges - Chiara Clio Packard, University of Utah
Defying The Bully Pulpit: Government Mandates and Employer Passive Resistance - Ben A. Rissing, Cornell University; Katie Apker, Cornell University; Laura Carver, Cornell University
“Police Liability Insurance Models, Risk, and the Neoliberal Governance of Police Violence” - Stephen Wulff, University of Tennessee-Knoxville
The Hidden Neoliberal State, Governing Logics, and the Rise of New York’s Legal Surcharges and Fees - Angela LaScala-Gruenewald, University of Massachusetts Amherst