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Policing the Planet: Why the Policing Crisis Led to Black Lives Matter [Minkštas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 320 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 235x156x20 mm, weight: 517 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-May-2016
  • Leidėjas: Verso Books
  • ISBN-10: 1784783161
  • ISBN-13: 9781784783167
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 320 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 235x156x20 mm, weight: 517 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-May-2016
  • Leidėjas: Verso Books
  • ISBN-10: 1784783161
  • ISBN-13: 9781784783167
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Collects the writings of activists from the #BlackLivesMatter movement which comment on police brutality and social injustice.

Policing has become one of the urgent issues of our time, the target of dramatic movements and front-page coverage from coast to coast in the United States, and, indeed, across the world. Now a star-studded, wide-ranging collection of writers and activists offers a global response, describing ongoing struggles over policing from New York to Ferguson to Los Angeles, as well as London, Rio de Janeiro, Johannesburg, and Mexico City.

This book, combining first-hand accounts from organizers with the research of eminent scholars and contributions by leading artists, traces the global rise of the "broken-windows" style of policing, first established in New York City under Police Commissioner Bill Bratton, a doctrine that has vastly increased and broadened police power and contributed to the contemporary crisis of policing that has been sparked by notorious incidents of police brutality and killings. With contributions from Black Lives Matter cofounder Patrisse Cullors, Ferguson activist and St. Louis University law professor Justin Hansford, scholars Vijay Prashad and Ruth Wilson Gilmore, Pakistani writer and politician Hamid Khan, and many more.

Recenzijos

This book is the best analytical and political response we have to the historic rebellions in Ferguson! Don't miss it. -- Cornel West, author of Black Prophetic Fire We owe Jordan Camp and Christina Heatherton a great expression of gratitude for this brilliant and provocative collection of voices that compels us to see the Black Lives Matter Movement in the larger context of twenty-first-century racial capitalism and the growing carceral state. -- Barbara Ransby, author of Ella Baker and the Black Freedom Movement A major work . As someone who certainly admires the work of these scholars, I couldn't think of a more compelling and timely work such as this. I am pleased to not only be in community with these amazing people but to listen and learn from them . Policing the Planet comes at an incredibly important time. -- Khalil Gibran Muhammad, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture When this series of essays addressing contemporary activism's biggest movement hits stands in May, we'll be ready. A variety of contributors, including anti-police brutality and militarization activists from around the country and world, promise to make Policing the Planet a definitive work for anybody confused about exactly what structural law enforcement powers lead to our current racial justice climate. * Colorlines * This broad collection of sharp commentary from activists, academics, and artists situates recent struggles right where they belong-in opposition to an increasingly global regime of police abuse. * Flavorwire * A probing collection of essays and interviews. * Philadelphia Tribune * Through compiling so many critical voices in one place, Camp and Heatherton have created a much-needed guidebook of resistance to our planet's police state and the structures of urban governance that feed it. -- Aaron Cantś * Washington Spectator * Policing the Planet is an important intervention to a key issue at a crucial time. -- Ramor Ryan * TeleSur * An incredible anthology tracing the bloody history of broken-windows policing and its implications for city life in general. -- James Tracy * Rooflines *

Daugiau informacijos

How policing became the major political issue of our time
How We Could Have Lived or Died This Way ix
Martin Espada
Introduction: Policing the Planet 1(14)
Jordan T. Camp
Christina Heatherton
I THE PLANETARY CRISIS OF POLICING
1 Thug Nation: On State Violence and Disposability
15(20)
Robin D. G. Kelley
2 #BlackLivesMatter and Global Visions of Abolition: An Interview with Patrisse Cullors
35(6)
Christina Heatherton
3 Broken Windows at Blue's: A Queer History of Gentrification and Policing
41(22)
Christina B. Hanhardt
4 Ending Broken Windows Policing in New York City: An Interview with Joo-Hyun Kang
63(10)
Jordan T. Camp
Christina Heatherton
5 The Baltimore Uprising
73(10)
Anjali Kamat
6 Total Policing and the Global Surveillance Empire Today: An Interview with Arun Kundnani
83(12)
Jordan T. Camp
Christina Heatherton
7 Mano Dura Contra El Crimen and Premature Death in Puerto Rico
95(14)
Marisol Lebron
8 Policing the Crisis of Indigenous Lives: An Interview with the Red Nation
109(14)
Christina Heatherton
II BROKEN WINDOWS POLICING AS NEOLIBERAL URBAN STRATEGY
9 Policing Place and Taxing Time on Skid Row
123(18)
George Lipsitz
10 Asset Stripping and Broken Windows Policing on LA's Skid Row: An Interview with Becky Dennison and Pete White
141(10)
Jordan T. Camp
Christina Heatherton
11 Broken Windows, Surveillance, and the New Urban Counterinsurgency: An Interview with Hamid Khan
151(6)
Jordan T. Camp
Christina Heatherton
12 The Emergence of Command and Control Policing in Neoliberal New York
157(16)
Alex S. Vitale
Brian Jordan Jefferson
13 Beyond Bratton
173(28)
Ruth Wilson Gilmore
Craig Gilmore
14 They're Not Solving the Problem, They're Displacing It: An Interview with Alex Sanchez
201(6)
Steven Osuna
15 Resisting State Violence in the Era of Mass Deportation: An Interview with Mizue Aizeki
207(8)
Jordan T. Camp
Christina Heatherton
III THE CRISIS OF BROKEN WINDOWS COMMON SENSE
16 Community Policing Reconsidered: From Ferguson to Baltimore
215(12)
Justin Hansford
17 How Liberals Legitimate Broken Windows: An Interview with Naomi Murakawa
227(10)
Jordan T. Camp
Christina Heatherton
18 "Broken Windows Is Not the Panacea": Common Sense, Good Sense, and Police Accountability in American Cities
237(22)
Don Mitchell
Kafui Attoh
Lynn A. Staeheli
19 We Charge Genocide: An Interview with Breanna Champion, Page May, and Asha Rosa Ransby-Sporn
259(8)
Jordan T. Camp
Christina Heatherton
20 The Magical Life of Broken Windows
267(12)
Rachel Herzing
21 Poetry and the Political Imagination: An Interview with Martin Espada
279(4)
Jordan T. Camp
Christina Heatherton
22 This Ends Badly: Race and Capitalism
283(16)
Vijay Prashad
Acknowledgments 299
Jordan T. Camp is Director of Research at the People's Forum, Visiting Scholar in the Center for Place, Culture and Politics at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, and Co-Director of the Racial Capitalism Working Group in the Center for the Study of Social Difference at Columbia University. Christina Heatherton is an Assistant Professor of American Studies at Trinity College.