Collected Papers of the Faculty of Law, University of Novi Sad
2017, vol. 51, No. 2, pp. 297–316
Language of the paper: Serbian
Original scientific paper
udk: 351.74“17“
doi: 10.5937/zrpfns51-13840
Authors:
Dušan Marinković, Ph. D., Full Professor
University of Novi Sad
Faculty of Philosophy Novi Sad
dusan.marinkovic@ff.uns.ac.rs
Dušan Ristić, Ph. D., Assistant Professor
University of Novi Sad
Faculty of Philosophy Novi Sad
dusan.ristic@ff.uns.ac.rs
Abstract:
In this paper we research the meaning and significance of the concept of police in the works of Michel Foucault. We assume that this concept, whose emergence in Foucault’s genealogy is placed within the eighteenth century is different from the modern concept of police from nineteenth and twentieth century. Our hypothesis is that early concept of police was not a consequence of the single dispositive of power and the result of the sovereign type of power. We understand the Foucault’s concept of police in the context of the birth of governmentality and historical appearance of the diagram of security, where dispositive of space is crucial. Foucault’s police as the regulative practice of distribution of situational forces in society was a spatially regionalized and segmented, regulatory social mechanism. It occurs together with the processes of politicization of life, along with the emergence of biopolitical technologies. In this sense, police as the phenomenon of XVIII century, should be understood as the emergence of the new type of governmentality and regulation that will signify the important modulation in the disciplinary diagram and the appearance of the new type of reality – society.
Keywords:
security, discipline, police, space, regulation, Michel Foucault.