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Becoming abolitionists : police, protests, and the pursuit of freedom

Purnell, Derecka. (Author).

For more than a century, activists in the United States have tried to reform the police. From community policing initiatives to increasing diversity, none of it has stopped the police from killing about three people a day. Millions of people continue to protest police violence because these solutions do not match the problem: the police cannot be reformed. In Becoming Abolitionists, Purnell draws from her experiences as a lawyer, writer, and organizer initially skeptical about police abolition. She saw too much sexual violence and buried too many friends to consider getting rid of police in her hometown of St. Louis, let alone the nation. But the police were a placebo. Calling them felt like something , and something feels like everything when the other option seems like nothing. Purnell details how multi-racial social movements rooted in rebellion, risk-taking, and revolutionary love pushed her and a generation of activists toward abolition. The book travels across geography and time, and offers lessons that activists have learned from Ferguson to South Africa, from Reconstruction to contemporary protests against police shootings. Here, Purnell argues that police can not be reformed and invites readers to envision new systems that work to address the root causes of violence. Becoming Abolitionists shows that abolition is not solely about getting rid of police, but a commitment to create and support different answers to the problem of harm in society, and, most excitingly, an opportunity to reduce and eliminate harm in the first place.

Book  - 2021
363.2 Pur
1 copy / 0 on hold

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  • ISBN: 9781662600517
  • Physical Description 288 pages ; 25 cm
  • Publisher [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified], 2021.

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Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 9781662600517
Becoming Abolitionists : Police, Protests, and the Pursuit of Freedom
Becoming Abolitionists : Police, Protests, and the Pursuit of Freedom
by Purnell, Derecka
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Publishers Weekly Review

Becoming Abolitionists : Police, Protests, and the Pursuit of Freedom

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Human rights lawyer Purnell debuts with an idealistic and impassioned call for dismantling the police in order to address the root causes of violence and inequality. She tracks her own evolving attitudes toward the police from her childhood in a St. Louis neighborhood in the 1990s and early 2000s "where we called 911 for almost everything"; to college activism galvanized by the 2011 execution of Troy Davis for murdering a police officer, despite the case against him being "obviously flawed"; and her work as a public defender in a Harvard University legal clinic, where she realized "most of the 'criminals' were actually just poor people." Purnell places abolition within a social justice framework that includes decolonization, environmental justice, and disability rights, and forcefully disputes the notion that more policing is necessary to stop "senseless violence," arguing that drug decriminalization and programs to address health care, housing, and income disparities would "undermine the conditions that lead to violence and police contact." Her vision of what abolition looks like features neighborhood councils, conflict mediation centers, and green teams to foster sustainability. Bold and utopian, yet grounded in Purnell's experiences and copious evidence of how reform efforts have fallen short, this is an inspiring introduction to a hot-button topic. (Oct.)

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 9781662600517
Becoming Abolitionists : Police, Protests, and the Pursuit of Freedom
Becoming Abolitionists : Police, Protests, and the Pursuit of Freedom
by Purnell, Derecka
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Kirkus Review

Becoming Abolitionists : Police, Protests, and the Pursuit of Freedom

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

How radically reimagining policing might benefit not only Black communities, but the broader social order. In this sociological treatise and intellectual autobiography, Purnell, a human rights lawyer and organizer, argues convincingly that police departments and prisons are irredeemably implicated in racist ideologies and the perpetuation of violence despite long-standing efforts at reform. These institutions, she writes, "don't solve harm, they simply react to it, arbitrarily, disproportionately, incoherently," and therefore ought to be dismantled and replaced by alternatives that promote social justice. Purnell offers persuasive accounts of how racial biases produce "daily injustice" not just in policing and the courts, but in housing, labor, and education, and she links systemic discrimination in the present day, as well as specific instances of police violence against African Americans, to the legacy of slavery and colonialism. She also skillfully relates strategies employed by contemporary reform movements to "a history of freedom and resistance," and this long-term view contextualizes her own conclusions about the need for a thorough reimagination of what might properly constitute law and order. One of the strengths of the book is the author's illuminating reflections on her own experiences with the failures of policing, her tactics as a civil rights lawyer, and her philosophical evolution as an activist. Another is Purnell's deft framing of the search for solutions to violence and various forms of exploitation as part of larger--in fact, global--attempts to advance "decolonization, disability justice, Earth justice, and socialism." Ultimately, she writes, "rather than thinking of abolition as just getting rid of police, I think about it as a way to create and support a multitude of approaches to the problem of harm in society, and, most excitingly, as an opportunity to reduce and eliminate harm in the first place." An informed, provocative, astute consideration of salvific alternatives to contemporary policing and imprisonment. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Syndetic Solutions - BookList Review for ISBN Number 9781662600517
Becoming Abolitionists : Police, Protests, and the Pursuit of Freedom
Becoming Abolitionists : Police, Protests, and the Pursuit of Freedom
by Purnell, Derecka
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BookList Review

Becoming Abolitionists : Police, Protests, and the Pursuit of Freedom

Booklist


From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

In her debut book, human rights lawyer and activist Purnell weaves together memoir and sociology to track her journey towards supporting police abolition, the replacement of policing with alternative forms of public safety. From her upbringing in St. Louis to Harvard Law School, Purnell's first-hand experiences of racism and police violence are placed in context with the protests across the country over the killing of George Floyd and so many others. In an attempt to answer the common question, "What about the murderers?," Purnell traces the roots of abolition from the antislavery movement to modern calls for police abolition and looks at the ways that racism, poverty, sexual violence, and climate change shape advocacy for abolition. Citations abound in this well-documented memoir that ties Purnell's personal inquiry to the events that have ignited national interest in policing reform. While her narrative is densely fact-packed throughout, Purnell is able to deftly lead the reader through the ins and outs of the abolitionist mindset so that it is clear and comprehensible for all, including those who, like her, might be initially skeptical.

Syndetic Solutions - CHOICE_Magazine Review for ISBN Number 9781662600517
Becoming Abolitionists : Police, Protests, and the Pursuit of Freedom
Becoming Abolitionists : Police, Protests, and the Pursuit of Freedom
by Purnell, Derecka
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CHOICE_Magazine Review

Becoming Abolitionists : Police, Protests, and the Pursuit of Freedom

CHOICE


Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.

Ed. Note: Choice considers racial justice a cornerstone of its mandate to support academic study. Accordingly, Choice is highlighting select racial justice titles through the creation of long-form reviews such as the one featured here. Though the scope of these reviews will be broader than those applied to our standard 190-word reviews, many of the guidelines regarding what to focus on will remain the same, with additional consideration for how the text under review sheds light on racist systems and racial inequities or proposes means of dismantling them. Our intent is to feature important works on racial justice that will be of use to undergraduates and faculty researching racism and racial inequalities from new perspectives. How do Americans create a secure, equal society in which citizens can be protected from crime, violence, and the other negative aspects of life? Purnell, a human rights lawyer, writer, and organizer who earned her JD from Harvard Law School, asks this much larger question in Becoming Abolitionists. She begins with an analysis of policing in minority communities and the rise of Black Lives Matter as a modern political movement before pushing the conversation further into a thought-provoking, nuanced argument for a new society. In service to her argument, she explores and elevates all elements of life--housing, education, good jobs, mental and physical health care, and economic empowerment--as essential to peace in the twenty-first century. The book opens with an autobiographical note in which the author poses a fundamental question: why do people call the police? She answers that growing up in her St. Louis, Missouri, neighborhood, the police were called for everything--"nosebleeds, gunshot wounds, asthma attacks, allergic reactions" (p. 1). This simple fact forms the foundation of her argument, which ponders why police are the first responders to nearly every crisis. How often do they face problems they are not trained for and are often ill equipped to handle? This default assumption that the police are essential to resolve all community disruptions is both understandable and problematic. The book probes this further by questioning whether Americans can trust the police to address non-criminal problems, such as health inequalities or joblessness, and if the police should be a solution to problems caused by capitalism. The economic dislocation of people and businesses in communities created by white flight and neoliberal development policies sets in motion a cascading set of problems that citizens react to by seeking order rather than justice. By analyzing the larger forces that create and perpetuate crime and inequality, Purnell enables readers to reassess the role of policing in American society. The book's analytical development follows the author's life from growing up in St. Louis to college; her time as a public school teacher in Kansas City, Missouri; and eventually law school at Harvard, where her activism and intellectual growth converged into a new perspective on the role of policing in American society. As Purnell encounters numerous challenges in her life, from the daily struggle to simply have a stable home to the constant police interactions she witnesses among her friends and family, readers observe the evolution of her thinking as she begins to examine the role of the police in the community with greater nuance. As her ideas evolve, her analysis deepens, and she moves from thinking of those harmed by police to exploring the connections between law enforcement and those who benefit from its presence. As she notes early in the book: The people who chose the police were the same people who drafted the Constitution, who started the wars, who owned slaves, who possessed property, who had the most to lose if oppressed people ever decided to revolt: wealthy white men. And rather than unifying and organizing against the concentrated wealth of this class, the rest of us have been tricked into demanding that the police protect us, too. They cannot. (p. 10) The rise of the Black Lives Matter movement in the wake of the killings of Trayvon Martin, Freddie Gray, and especially Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, is often understood as a passionate, grassroots response to police brutality. Purnell argues that these events inspired her and others in the movement to seek a deeper understanding of why the police are often the first on the ground to handle problems. This means understanding the role of the police in relation to the dominant social, economic, and political ideals in the United States. Once Americans address the myriad forces that structure police operations, the limits of criminal justice reform become clear, including the fact that significant changes will be constrained by the traditions of patriarchy, the assumptions of racism, and the imperatives of capitalism. This broader approach stands in stark contrast to the mainstream criticism of abolitionists' arguments as emotional reactions to police misconduct. This sentiment was most notably summed up by former President Barack Obama when he called on activists to avoid what he termed "snappy slogans," such as "defund the police" in 2020. The problem with police reform, Purnell argues, is that police are trained to maintain and protect the status quo in society, leaving untouched forces that create and perpetuate inequality. The need for a group empowered to enforce peace rather than justice fundamentally limits the possibility of creating policies that can end the evolving set of problems that stem from policing. Aggressive law enforcement is not simply a matter of how to deal with people breaking the law; what happens when police confront people with mental illness? Police may be called to respond to someone acting out, but if that person is impaired, will police officers be the most effective responders in that situation? Should police be the first responders to domestic disputes? How do they enforce eviction actions? Should traditional police training address such problems? Can police reform programs create viable answers to these questions? Still others may wonder, what about the murderers and rapists? One of the most intriguing aspects of this book is Purnell's discussion of the counter argument--what will happen if policing is successfully abolished? The fear of chaos and violence in a society without some mechanism for enforcement is often cited to reign in the almost utopic ideal of police abolition. The author does not avoid this and in fact admits that a force to handle violent crime is necessary. She does however pose a provocative rejoinder of her own, urging readers to consider how safe they feel in the present. State and local government funding for police has steadily increased over time, and federal programs have allocated military equipment to local police, equipping these departments with tanks, flashbang grenades, and semiautomatic and automatic rifles. However, murder and other violent crimes continue to occur at alarming rates. Do traditional methods of social control appear to be working? Can a new approach based on broader considerations for social justice be a more effective form of establishing and maintaining peace in communities? Chapters that apply this broader social justice lens to dealing with issues of crime, sex, and disability generate insights into the limits of reform and the need for a more complex set of solutions to social problems that currently rely on traditional police tactics to resolve. Returning to the author's personal story, Purnell recounts how she began to better understand the possibilities of reform and the larger implications of abolition in a global context after traveling to South Africa, England, and Australia. These trips allowed her to see the impact that protest movements against police misconduct had in other nations, illuminating the connections between police reform movements in the United States and the global definition of human rights. Considering such connections leads one to contemplate what the standard by which all citizens are treated should be and whether state police reform can achieve that goal. What would a comprehensive program to address social, cultural, and political ills look like? Purnell argues that only a revolution of values and priorities can make police abolition a realistic and effective option. She notes that "historically, it has been possible to be abolitionist while also being capitalist, ableist, patriarchal, and colonialist. More than ever, we need dynamic abolitionisms that depart from all forms of oppression, and for each generation to decide their own fight and future" (p. 271). Purnell proposes several policies as essential to the birth of a new world in which safety is the default status for all citizens, and government is the engine that makes this a reality. These include neighborhood councils, universal childcare, art and meditation programs, conflict resolution workshops, health care clinics, and green teams as part of a comprehensive effort to revive communities and build a better world. Do citizens have the imagination and political will to work toward these goals? This book's ultimate strength lies in how it illustrates the evolution of an idea. The author moves with ease between the personal and the political, from community activist to conscious academic, and from reform to revolution. The argument builds from trying to solve one problem to understanding the interconnected nature of politics and policy, producing a provocative, incisive work that forces readers to consider abolition as a viable policy alternative with rewards that could serve a wider and deeper conception of the common good. Through activism, reflection, and legal training, Purnell challenges her audience to envision a world in which the stability of community, thought to be the core reason society needs police, can be the catalyst for a new, peaceful society. Summing Up: Recommended. All levels. --Kevin Anderson, Eastern Illinois University