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      • State violence is the use of force, intimidation, or oppression by a government or ruling body against the citizens within the jurisdiction of said state. This can be seen in a variety of forms, including military violence, settler colonialism, surveillance, immigration law, and other tactics used to express authority over a certain group.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_violence
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  2. Aug 18, 2011 · A Violent State: Directed by Adrian Langley. With Adrian Langley, Lee Beaudin, Jessica Edwards, David Rowan. Jordan Reese is a man on the verge of leaving his life of crime far behind him, until the night that his past sneaks into town.

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  3. Aug 13, 2012 · A Violent State - Official Full Trailer - YouTube. parktownpro. 72 subscribers. Subscribed. 3. 1.2K views 11 years ago. WINNER "BEST FILM" 2011 OIFF Buy the film:...

  4. Mar 16, 2018 · Social scientists define state violence broadly, ranging from direct political violence and genocide to the redefinition of state violence as the neoliberal exit of the state from the provision of social services and the covert use of new technologies of citizen surveillance.

  5. State violence is the use of force, intimidation, or oppression by a government or ruling body against the citizens within the jurisdiction of said state. This can be seen in a variety of forms, including military violence, settler colonialism, surveillance, immigration law, and other tactics used to express authority over a certain group.

  6. State violence has many faces. It encompasses the unlawful limitation of freedom of speech, jailing of non-violent political prisoners, torture and other kinds of maltreatment, the death penalty, the refusal of fair trials and the pursuit of unfair trials, arbitrary arrests and the ‘disappearance’ of members of the opposition as well as ...

  7. Jan 1, 2022 · Acts that constitute state violence include: “human rights violations, crimes against humanity, war crimes, genocide, torture, prisoner abuse, and the oppression of racial, ethnic, gender, religious, or political minorities” (Kauzlarich, 2008, p. 688).

  8. Violence and the state’ talks about how interpersonal violence declined as states gained a monopoly over violence. As the state assumed responsibility for the exercise of violence, it was able to reduce levels of violence among ordinary people.