Chapter: The Sensory Effects of Racial Profiling in Berlin’s KBO’s.

In the Handbook of Sensory Criminology, Routledge 
Editors: Jason Warr, Kate Herrity, Janani Umamaheswar, Kanupriya Sharma.

The chapter focuses on the carceral geography of Berlin is a lens that reveals the sensory production of racialized bodied through the practice of ‘racial profiling.’ A disputed and contentious practice that is not only informed by public policy, but a racial imaginary, an imaginary that casts racialized bodies as ‘other’ and as ‘out of place’ in Germany. Therefore, this chapter explores the sensory dimensions of designated high crime areas in Berlin, known as KBO’s. In doing so, I draw on the experiences of members of the Black diaspora in Berlin who have encountered the dynamics and practices within these areas, as well as the work of critical geographers such as Rashad Shabazz and the sensory scholarship of R.Murray Schafer, to expose not only these spatial practices of racism, but to highlight the importance of their sensory implications

Link to the book