Intensive policing and the expansion of the carceral condition are some of
the most flagrant expressions of the current phase of gendered racial capitalism.
Through the regulation and illegalization of migration, anti-terror legislation, the
punishment of poverty and the war on crime, black and other negatively racialized
subjects and groups are particularly vulnerable to state sanctioned forms of
premature death across the Global North and South. In many contexts of continental
Europe, mobilizations against racist policing (racial profiling) lead by human rights
and community organizations and initiatives have addressed this condition in the
recent years. What often remains at the margins, however, are the intersectional
modalities and dimensions of racist policing and punishment. Likewise, the issue
of racist policing and the expansion of the punitive condition is seldomly discussed
within European gender studies and broader feminist movements in continental
Europe. As the title suggests, this article challenges one-dimensional readings of
racist policing and engages with the silences around intersectional modalities of police violence. It further addresses the reproduction of carceral feminisms within
gender studies and feminist approaches in continental Europe. Departing from
current debates and my scholar activist work on racial profiling in the contexts of
continental Europe (mainly Germany, Switzerland and France) and by applying
a black feminist framework, I interrogate modalities of intersectional structural,
slow and silent violence engendered by policing. In a second step, I discuss the
implications of carceral feminisms and problematize the broad silences within
gender studies and feminist movements around intersectional modalities of police
violence. Finally, possibilities and horizons of intersectional abolition are sketched
out.