Exculpating Injustice: Coroner Constructions of White Innocence in the Postbellum South

Research notes the broad complicity of white public officials in historical racial violence and repression. These discussions emphasize the role of criminal justice actors in perpetrating and enabling this repression. Extending this assessment, the authors examine coroners’ facilitation of white rac...

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Main Authors: Sarah Gaby, David Cunningham, Hedwig Lee, Geoff Ward, Ashley N. Jackson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-01-01
Series:Socius
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2378023120983647
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spelling doaj-fb5bcf6f089c4beba58a434dfb238ebf2021-01-26T20:07:28ZengSAGE PublishingSocius2378-02312021-01-01710.1177/2378023120983647Exculpating Injustice: Coroner Constructions of White Innocence in the Postbellum SouthSarah Gaby0David Cunningham1Hedwig Lee2Geoff Ward3Ashley N. Jackson4University of North Carolina, Wilmington, NC, USAWashington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USAWashington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USAWashington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USAWashington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USAResearch notes the broad complicity of white public officials in historical racial violence and repression. These discussions emphasize the role of criminal justice actors in perpetrating and enabling this repression. Extending this assessment, the authors examine coroners’ facilitation of white racial dominance through administrative performances constructing white innocence. Using cases from post-Emancipation South Carolina, the authors document race-related patterns of exculpatory effort, through the omission and curation of evidence amid the post-Reconstruction rise of white supremacist redemption. The authors theorize that these exculpatory efforts helped sustain an ideology of white innocence and institutional legitimacy by constructing a white “law-abiding” public. The authors argue that such coroner misconduct not only degrades the rule of law but has broader implications, including its corruption of the corpus of mortality and crime data. Finally, the authors suggest that these administrative performances persist in present-day coroner reporting, including in the exculpation of racist police violence.https://doi.org/10.1177/2378023120983647
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarah Gaby
David Cunningham
Hedwig Lee
Geoff Ward
Ashley N. Jackson
spellingShingle Sarah Gaby
David Cunningham
Hedwig Lee
Geoff Ward
Ashley N. Jackson
Exculpating Injustice: Coroner Constructions of White Innocence in the Postbellum South
Socius
author_facet Sarah Gaby
David Cunningham
Hedwig Lee
Geoff Ward
Ashley N. Jackson
author_sort Sarah Gaby
title Exculpating Injustice: Coroner Constructions of White Innocence in the Postbellum South
title_short Exculpating Injustice: Coroner Constructions of White Innocence in the Postbellum South
title_full Exculpating Injustice: Coroner Constructions of White Innocence in the Postbellum South
title_fullStr Exculpating Injustice: Coroner Constructions of White Innocence in the Postbellum South
title_full_unstemmed Exculpating Injustice: Coroner Constructions of White Innocence in the Postbellum South
title_sort exculpating injustice: coroner constructions of white innocence in the postbellum south
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Socius
issn 2378-0231
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Research notes the broad complicity of white public officials in historical racial violence and repression. These discussions emphasize the role of criminal justice actors in perpetrating and enabling this repression. Extending this assessment, the authors examine coroners’ facilitation of white racial dominance through administrative performances constructing white innocence. Using cases from post-Emancipation South Carolina, the authors document race-related patterns of exculpatory effort, through the omission and curation of evidence amid the post-Reconstruction rise of white supremacist redemption. The authors theorize that these exculpatory efforts helped sustain an ideology of white innocence and institutional legitimacy by constructing a white “law-abiding” public. The authors argue that such coroner misconduct not only degrades the rule of law but has broader implications, including its corruption of the corpus of mortality and crime data. Finally, the authors suggest that these administrative performances persist in present-day coroner reporting, including in the exculpation of racist police violence.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2378023120983647
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