Participations in law and order No 29, 2021/1 - pagesPages 7 to 40Participations in law and order and conservative participationsBy Guillaume Gourgues, Julie Le MazierPages 41 to 71Is security really everyone’s business? The limits of citizen participation in a typically sovereign domain in FranceBy Virginie MalochetPages 73 to 96When the gendarmerie becomes participatory: Figures of neighborhood watch volunteers in FranceBy Eleonora ElguezabalPages 97 to 122Does surveillance have a political color? Circles of vigilance, social capital, and municipal competition in peri-urban areasBy Matthijs GardenierPages 123 to 156Democratizing the gun. The composite imagination of a coercive citizenship in UgandaBy Florence Brisset-FoucaultPages 157 to 187Police vigilantes and vigilant police. Community policing and division of police work in urban MalawiBy Paul GrassinPages 189 to 213Social hierarchies, moral reform, and economic precariousness within the Oodua People’s Congress: From radical vigilante experience to security work in Lagos (Nigeria)By Lucie RevillaPages 215 to 235Getting certified as a citizen rescuer in contemporary China. A virtue established and represented after the event at the local administration levelBy Chayma BodaPages 239 to 247Contributing to moderation on social networks: Defining, applying, and contesting the rulesBy Romain Badouard