Provides a critical perspective on current patterns of policing and mass incarceration in the United States and beyond. The course examines the historical roots and ideological justifications for police and prison and how notions of crime and order shape the ways we understand and justify and justify anti-Black policing policies. Focuses on fighting-crime strategies (such as one-strike, zero tolerance and the war on drugs) and their deepening of social vulnerabilities along gender, race, sexuality and class lines. Engages with abolitionist responses to neoliberal carcerality and its prison industrial complex.

Prerequisites: Upper-division standing.

4

Units

Letter

Grading

1

Passtime

Upper division only

Level Limit

Letters and science

College
GEs Area D Writing
These majors only blkst
DACOSTA M
No info found
Winter 2024 . Alves J A
PHELP1160
M W
17:00 PM - 18:15 PM
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