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A  reservist  is  “a  member  of  the  community  who  performs  policing   du>es  or  ac>vi>es  for  the  SAPS  on  a  voluntary  basis  without  being   paid  for  those  services.”  (SAPS,  2013)  

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There  are  4  types    (mostly  concerned  with  A)   Work  is  not  remunerated   Must  work  a  minimum  of  16  hours  a  month   Must  have  a  grade  12   Must  have  employment  elsewhere   Can  wear  the  iden>cal  uniform  to  regular  officers   Carry  out  the  same  func>on  as  regular  officers   Receive  3  months  part-­‐>me  training  

Based  on  broader  research   •  Informed  in  and  through  difference:  The  perspec>ves   of  suburban  reservists  

–  Made  use  of  a  mosaic  of  theories  which  consider  society   and  histpry  without  losing  individual  voices   –  Asked  how  police  reservists  perceive  their  role  in  the   SAPS?     –  Asked  how  these  percep>ons  are  normalised  through  and   based  on  difference?   –  Found  that  reservists  felt  their  posi>ons  in  SAPS  were   fragile   –  Found  that  reasons  for  joining,  staying  and  the  ways  the   labour  was  u>lised  were  ar>culated  through  race,  class,   and  gender    

Analysis  of  discourses   •  Pu^ng  on  the  uniforms   –  White  hobby/black  opportunity   –  The  normal  men  

•  Recruitment  and  suitability  for  the  job   –  Essen>al  construc>ons  of  femininity  and  masculinity   –  A  dance  of  percep>ons  

•  The  uniform  fe>sh   –  Feared  changes  and  the  conflict  of  subjec>vity   –  Discipline:  The  art  of  rank  (and  hierarchies)  

Today’s  presenta>on   •  Focus  on  one  theme  White  hobby/Black  opportunity   •  Looks  at  how  perspec>ves  on  mo>va>on  are  raciailised   and  classed  (implicitly  gendered)  and  can  illustrate   broader  social/historical  processes  as  well  as  internal   organisa>onal  processes  and  issues  

Why  is  this  important?   •  In  Gauteng  reservists  make  a  sizeable  temporary  work  force     –  7  528      which  is  between  16-­‐19%  of  the  en>re  SAPS  workforce  

•  Like  normal  officers:   –  They  are  symbols  of  the  state   –  They  are  used  for  state  pursuits   –  They  connect  the  state  and  public  

•  Important  component  of  community  policing  ini>a>ves   •  There  has  been  a  moratorium  on  recruitment  and  promo>ons   since  April  2009  and  a  new  Na>onal  Instruc>on  is  expected   •  No  academic  work  on  them  despite  being  in  existence  since   the  early  60s    

The  interviews   •  Snowball  method   •  23  reservists  in  total  

–  14  individual  semi-­‐structured   –  2  focus  groups  (4  and  5  people)   –  Over-­‐represented  by  white  men  (17)   •  Issue  of  area  

•  Ad-­‐hoc  discussions  with  permanent  members   (12)   •  Ride  alongs  and  surveys   •  Cri>cal  analysis  of  discourses  

8  of  14  said  they  joined  to  help  community  but   said  if  honest,  it  was  more  about  fun,  such  as   Captain  D  (63  year  old,  white  male)    

CD:  The  ulterior  mo>ve  I  think  was,  at  that  stage,  I’m  a  lijle   ashamed  to  say  just  the  adrenaline.  It  was  -­‐-­‐.  In  those  days  if   somebody  asked  me  why  I  was  a  police  reservist  or  -­‐-­‐.  To  us   there’s  no  such  thing  as  a  police  reservist,  when  you’re  booked   on  duty,  you’re  a  policeman  full  stop.  We  wear  the  same   uniform,  undergo  the  same  training,  same  weapons,  same   vehicles,  same  duty,  and  same  authority.  When  you  booked  on   duty  you  are  simply  a  policeman.  And  when  I  -­‐-­‐.  If  somebody   had  asked  me  in  those  days  “Why  do  you  do  this?”  I  would  say   something  noble  sounding  like  “well,  it’s  a  community  service   and  there’s  not  enough  policemen”.  Somebody  once   commented  “nonsense,  it’s  the  lijle  boy  in  you  s>ll  playing   cowboys  and  crooks”  and  that  was  probably  closer  to  the   truth.  

Complex  reasons  for  joining  –  not   binary   WOB:  …  you’ve  got  us  as  people  who  want  to  serve  the   community.  We  want  to  have  fun,  we  enjoy  the   camaraderie  of  being  a  group  and  we  are  a  lijle  bit  elite   from  the  general  public  and  it’s  something  about  the   uniform.  When  we  put  that  uniform  on  there  is  a  slightly   eli>st  sort  of  feeling  that  we  are  doing  something  special   and  you’ve  got  the  uniform,  you’ve  got  the  gun,  albeit   the  gun  is  sort  of  a  badge  of  rank  in  a  majer  of  speaking,   and  you  go  out  there  to  do  your  bit  to  protect  the  society   but  it’s  not  without  altruis>c  mo>ves  in  terms  of  “Ok  that   is  what  I  am  here  for”  but  there  is  the  excitement  and   enjoyment  of  driving  fast  cars  -­‐-­‐.  (Warrant  Officer  B  –  64   year  old  white  male)  

Despite  complex  reasons  for   joining  the  no>on  of  black   people  looking  for  job   opportuni>es  was  extremely   prevalent  in  the  individual   interviews  (13/14)     Why  would  one  group  be  so   overwhelming  aligned  with   fun  and  the  ‘other’  thought   to  be  wan>ng  opportuni>es?  

White  hobby/black   opportunity?     •  Collapse  of  professions  and  race   •  Collapse  of  area  and  race     •  Inequali>es  hidden  behind   euphemisms  of  educa>on  and   employment   •  Poor  reflec>on  on  history  (racial   dividend)   •  Black  reservists  as  pseudo  permanent     •  Triangula>on  of  race  and  class   (implicitly  gender  too)   •  Points  to  broader  social  issues  of   inequality    

Racial  dividend   CFT:  Do  you  think  white  reservists,  the  ones  you  work  with  here,  do  you  think   they  want  to  be  permanent  force  members?   CI:  To  my  sta>on,  no   CFT:  Why  not?   CI:  They  say  salary’s  too  small  and  they  got  already  too  much  responsibility  so   -­‐-­‐.  If  salary  was  not  small  they  would  love  to  be,  they  would  love  to  be.     CFT:  So  it’s  not  that  they  don’t  like  the  job,  the  money  -­‐-­‐.     CI:  The  money  is  a  big  problem  and  they’ve  already  got  their  own   responsibili>es.  If  the  money  was  OK,  believe  me  most  of  them  would  flock,   that  one  I’m  sure.   (Constable  I  –  30  year  old,  black  male)    

CA:  Also  as  a  general  rule  from  what  I  have  seen  the  white  men  are   generally  a  lot  more  affluent.  You  know  so  -­‐-­‐.  Not  from  wealthy  areas   but  they  are  doing  this  as  a  hobby  you  know-­‐-­‐  for  whatever  reason.  To   help  the  community.  They’ve  got  a  basic  job  which  helps  paying  for  it   and  it’s  generally  a  much  higher  paying  basic  job  than  most  of  your   black  males.     CFT:  Why  do  you  think  that’s  important?       CA:  I  think  that  it’s  a  -­‐-­‐.  Effec>vely  it’s  a  luxury  item.  Your  white  male  is   in  a  much  bejer  paying  job  -­‐-­‐  can  afford  to  spend  the  >me  or  buy  the   >me  to  go  reserving  as  opposed  to  a  black  male  whose  let’s  call  it   painter  or  manages  a  small  team  at  a  plumbing  place  and  suddenly   making  ends  meet  is  so  much  more  difficult.  So  they’ve  got  less  luxury   >me  to  spend  in  the  reserve.   (Constable  A  –  34  year  old,  white  male)    

Final  remarks   •  Failure  to  recognise  racial  dividend   –  Society  characterised  by  gross  inequali>es  (historically  informed)   –  Different  worth/value  given  to  labour   –  Organisa>on  that  may  exploit  these  crevasses  (Constable  I,  recruitment   requirements)  

•  Further  research  in  different  spaces  in  needed     •  These  findings  are  part  of  broader  findings  which  note   –  Reservists  have  complex  reasons  for  joining  informed  both  by  history  and   personal  experience   –  Policing  is  a  male  excerise,  women  are  alien  or  anamolies  (strong  men)   –  Reservists  smooth  over  difference  using  symbols  such  as  the  unifrom  (fe>sh   item)   –  Uncertain  of  their  roles  and  fear  of  abjec>on  

Thank  you!     If  you  are  interested  in  reading  the  paper  Google  the  >tle  Informed  in  and  through   difference:  The  perspec6ves  of    Johannesburg’s  reservists  and  their  role  in  the  SAPS  it   will  the  come  up  in  Lund  University’s  thesis  database  (LUP)  and  you  can  download   the  document  for  free.  You  can  contact  me  on  [email protected]