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Dr Graham Denyer Willis

Director of Studies in Geography, Queens’ College

Biography

Graham Denyer Willis is Associate Professor in Development Studies and Latin American Studies in the Department of Politics and International Studies, and a Fellow in Geography at Queens’ College.

Research

A political ethnographer, Graham’s research and teaching is concerned with practices and assumptions of power amidst inequality, as they work through cities, institutions and informality. He approaches these questions from historical and contemporary Brazil, to question how direct and indirect forms of violence and social organisation matter in the production and maintenance of political authority in space. He is especially motivated to identify and question forms of entrapment and escape from power and capitalism, globally.

He is the author of two books, both published by the University of California Press. His first book, The Killing Consensus: Police, Organized Crime, and the Regulation of Life and Death in Urban Brazil (2015), accompanies homicide detectives in São Paulo as they negotiate an incipient organised crime group and police who kill 2.3 times per day. He argues for a conceptualisation of organised crime as ‘nested’ in the state’s regulation of life and death, and rooted in a shared understanding of which kinds of killings matters, where and why in the city.

His second book, Keep the Bones Alive: Missing People and the Search for Life in Brazil (2022), examines how and why 20,000 – 25,000 people go missing, per year, in São Paulo. Keep the Bones Alive explores this phenomenon and why there is little concern for those who vanish. he accompanies family members, state workers, and gravediggers to examine the rationalization underpinning why bodies are missing in space including cemeteries, the criminal coroner’s office, and prisons. By following the bereaved as they confront an indifferent state and suspicious society and search for loved ones against all odds, this book reveals where missing bodies go and the reasons why people can disappear without being pursued. Recognizing that disappearance has long been central to Brazil’s everyday political order, with some people pursued and others not, this humanistic account of the silences surrounding disappearance shows why a demand for a politics of life is needed more than ever.

He is now at work on a third ethnographic monograph, which examines the practices and logics of ‘trust and safety’ in Silicon Valley as vital to a global regime of security and accumulation rooted in platform capitalism.

He welcomes emails from anyone seeking an expert witness for asylum and/or deportation concerns because of police or organised crime violence in Brazil.

Graham is interested in supervising PhD students whose work touches on development, freedom and unfreedom, race, governance, everyday political contestation, violence and informality, and especially those wishing to do ethnographic inquiry and/or who are interested in Latin America. Prospective students should familiarise themselves with Graham’s general line of inquiry and research interests.

Publications

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Teaching

Graham teaches in Development Studies, Latin American Studies, Geography, and Politics across undergraduate and graduate papers.