Brendan McQuade is Assistant Professor of Criminology at the University of Southern Maine.
Through comprehensive research, McQuade offers a substantial contribution to studies in policing, surveillance, historical sociology, and social justice. . . . As the book makes clear, mass supervision, an outgrowth and extension of mass incarceration, helps maintain the stark-and starkly racialized-inequalities that characterize the United States. Understanding intelligence fusion and mass supervision is necessary to challenge such conditions, an effort Pacifying the Homeland contributes to greatly. * Journal of Criminal Justice Education * Pacifying the Homeland is part of a wave of much needed critical policing studies that at once echo an earlier era in the study of radical criminology, while also heralding the arrival of a new interventionist, unapologetic structural analysis of policing. * Punishment & Society * This is a vitally important book. * Religious Studies Review *