|
Product Description
Understanding the explosive protests over police killings and the legacy of racism
Following the high-profile deaths of eighteen-year-old Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and twenty-five-year-old Freddie Gray in Baltimore, Maryland, both cities erupted in protest over the unjustified homicides of unarmed black males at the hands of police officers. These local tragedies―and the protests surrounding them―assumed national significance, igniting fierce debate about the fairness and efficacy of the American criminal justice system. Yet, outside the gaze of mainstream attention, how do local residents and protestors in Ferguson and Baltimore understand their own experiences with race, place, and policing?
In Hands Up, Don’t Shoot, Jennifer Cobbina draws on in-depth interviews with nearly two hundred residents of Ferguson and Baltimore, conducted within two months of the deaths of Brown and Gray. She examines how protestors in both cities understood their experiences with the police, how those experiences influenced their perceptions of policing, what galvanized Black Lives Matter as a social movement, and how policing tactics during demonstrations influenced subsequent mobilization decisions among protesters. Ultimately, she humanizes people’s deep and abiding anger, underscoring how a movement emerged to denounce both racial biases by police and the broader economic and social system that has stacked the deck against young black civilians.
Hands Up, Don’t Shoot is a remarkably current, on-the-ground assessment of the powerful, protestor-driven movement around race, justice, and policing in America.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- Fixing Broken Windows: Restoring Order And Reducing Crime In Our Communities
- Pulled Over: How Police Stops Define Race and Citizenship (Chicago Series in Law and Society)
- The Color of Justice: Race, Ethnicity, and Crime in America
- Crook County: Racism and Injustice in America's Largest Criminal Court
- Bleeding Out: The Devastating Consequences of Urban Violence--and a Bold New Plan for Peace in the Streets
- Getting Played: African American Girls, Urban Inequality, and Gendered Violence
- You Can't Stop the Revolution: Community Disorder and Social Ties in Post-Ferguson America
- Building a Black Criminology, Volume 24: Race, Theory, and Crime (Advances in Criminological Theory)
- Deported: Immigrant Policing, Disposable Labor and Global Capitalism (Latina/o Sociology)
- Transcending Blackness: From the New Millennium Mulatta to the Exceptional Multiracial
*If this is not the "Hands Up, Don't Shoot" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Nov 18, 2024 04:17 +08.