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Confronting Counterinsurgency: Cop Cities and Democracy's Terrors [Minkštas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 176 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 198x129x13 mm, 12 Illustrations, black and white
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Aug-2025
  • Leidėjas: Pluto Press
  • ISBN-10: 0745351549
  • ISBN-13: 9780745351544
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 176 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 198x129x13 mm, 12 Illustrations, black and white
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Aug-2025
  • Leidėjas: Pluto Press
  • ISBN-10: 0745351549
  • ISBN-13: 9780745351544
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
How do we struggle within the wreckage of democracy?

“A work of radical care and love, a study guide for the urgency of the moment” Dian Million, author of Therapeutic Nations

“Guides us through confrontation with counterinsurgency in empire’s proxy wars, colonies, prisons and schools” Frances Madeson, author of Cooperative Village

“An incendiary political and philosophical reflection” Ken Fero, radical filmmaker and convenor of The People’s Tribunal on Police Killings

As we step into an era of rising fascism and normalized genocide, Confronting Counterinsurgency is an invaluable contribution to the fightback. 

Joy James brings together the voices of frontline activists, artists, and organizers from movements against militarism and state violence in the USA, Puerto Rico, Colombia, Palestine, Brazil, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and within prison walls. The book examines the role of institutions, universities and nonprofit organizations in the suppression of radical movements. Analyzing historical and contemporary colonialism, slavery, and militarized policing—such as Cop Cities, ICE, and the redesigned School of Americas—Confronting Counterinsurgency is a crucial tool for radicalizing and uniting our movements to fight for a better world.

Joy James is a political philosopher who works with organizers. Her books include In Pursuit of Revolutionary LoveNew Bones Abolition; and Contextualizing Angela Davis. Her edited volumes include Beyond Cop Cities and ENGAGE.

Recenzijos

'This is an essential and incendiary political and philosophical reflection on current global resistance movements. A collection of powerful narratives rooted in the liberation strategies of those who struggle against corporate and state conquest, brutality and death and who continue to resist' -- Ken Fero, radical filmmaker and convenor of The People's Tribunal on Police Killings 'Makes plain the relations between the U.S. as a militarized carceral police state, the imprisonment of our resistance, and the genocidal wars our technocracy imparts to the world in Gaza and beyond. This is a work of radical care and love, a study guide for the urgency of the moment where we must fight, to live, and to struggle' -- Dian Million, author of Therapeutic Nations, Healing in an Age of Indigenous Human Rights 'True to its title, this eye-opening book holds its readers steady while guiding us through a perturbing confrontation with counterinsurgency in empires proxy wars, colonies, prisons and schools. Cop cities emerge as domestic forts to contain an unlikely enemy us. But were neither helpless, nor alone' -- Frances Madeson, writer, author of Cooperative Village 'A powerful collection that reminds us that the progress we build toward liberation must be constantly defended. Rooted in a radical sense of love, care, and self critique, this collection brings together necessary conversations and analyses surrounding our movements' -- Momodou Taal, The Malcolm Effect Podcast 'Woven to form a radical tapestry that leads the reader into and through vibrant sites of insurgency, life-making, and struggle against the crushing force of fascism, imperial rot, and racial capitalism' -- Lara Sheehi, author of From the Clinic to the Streets: Psychoanalysis for Revolutionary Futures 'Spanning geographies and different approaches to organizing, these essays consistently demonstrate that the struggle for abolition is a global Black struggle. Abolition breaches the gates of reformist logics of all sorts to articulate a radical account of community-making and to offer us a different account of what living better collectively together can be' -- Rinaldo Walcott, author of On Property: Policing, Prisons and the Call for Abolition

Preface

Introduction (Joy James)

PART I. Carceral Cities and Civil/Human Rights

1. Atlantas Black Community Says Stop Cop Cities! (Rev. Keyanna Jones
Moore, interview by Margaret Kimberley, Black Agenda Report)

2. Resisting [ Global] Cop Cities and the Militarization of Policing (Liliana,
Joy James, Kalonji Jama Changa, interview by Chris Browne)

3. 1492: Indigenous Sovereignty, Black Self-Determination amid Repression
(Mohamed Abdou, Ashanti Alston, interview by Kalonji Changa, Joy James)

PART II. Battling Colonialism

4. UN Special Committee on Decolonization: Puerto Rico (Benjamin Ramos
Rosado)

5. Oxford Union Address on Genocide, Israel, Palestine (susan albuhawa)

6. Fighting for the Congo (Maurice Carney, Claude Gatebuke, Dr. Ikema
Ojore, Brother Passy, Kwame Wilburg, interview by Kalonji Changa and Rev.
Keyanna Jones Moore)

PART III. Counter Moves

7. Prisoner Human Rights Movement [ PHRM]: 2025 Nobel Letter and the Agency of
PHRM (Joy James with Silicon Valley De-Bug Organization)

8. The Abolition of Carceral Schooling (rosalind hampton)

9. Black (Brazilian) Futurity (Andréia Beatriz dos Santos, Hamilton Borges
dos Santos, interview by joćo costa vargas)

10. When Opportunity Knocks by Galley of the Streets (kai barrow, Jazz
Franklin, Kara Lynch)

Conclusion: Democracys Terrors and our Endless Resistance (Joy James)

Contributors
Joy James is a political philosopher who works with organizers. Her books include In Pursuit of Revolutionary Love; New Bones Abolition: Captive Maternal Agency and the (After)Life of Erica Garner; and Contextualizing Angela Davis: The Agency and Identity of an Icon. Her edited volumes with Pluto include Beyond Cop Cities: Dismantling State and Corporate-Funded Armies and Prisons and ENGAGE: Indigenous, Black, Afro-Indigenous Futures.