Beyond policing What better way to make the case for a police-free world than to show a world where it's possible

Philip V. McHarris, 1992-

Book - 2024

"What better way to make the case for a police free world than to show a world where it's possible? For Princeton University's Presidential Postdoctoral Fellow, Philip V. McHarris, body cameras, de-escalation training, procedural justice, diversity among police, and other popular reforms will never stop police violence. And high emphasis on punishment in the United States has left many communities without the resources needed to keep them safe. Beyond Policing aims to provide a better understanding of the origins and functions of policing and the criminal punishment system in the United States. In this research-driven collection of essays, author and sociologist Philip V. McHarris charts the pitfalls of policing in the United... States, from slave patrols, to the expansion of mass policing in the mid-1900s, and the epidemic of police violence today. Written in deftly precise, yet widely accessible language, Beyond Policing presents evidence, both data and anecdotal, that tackles the weight and toll of policing on people and communities and patterns that prove that police reform only leads to more policing. And for what seems like America's most oppressive institution, McHarris points to an exit from the current punitive paradigm, outlining strategies for responding to conflict and harm in ways that transform the conditions that gave rise to violence. This requires, he asserts, decriminalization, decarceration, and defunding punitive institutions that have created the current police and carceral state and a committed investment in community-based alternatives-mechanisms that actually provide safety"--

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Legacy Lit 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Philip V. McHarris, 1992- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xv, 304 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781538725665
  • Introduction
  • Part I. Histories
  • Chapter 1. The Origins of Policing
  • Interlude I
  • Chapter 2. The Police Boom
  • Interlude II
  • Part II. Currents
  • Chapter 3. The Tide
  • Interlude III
  • Chapter 4. Solutions for a New World
  • Interlude IV
  • Part III. Futures
  • Chapter 5. The Transformation of Justice
  • Chapter 6. An Abolitionist Future
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
Review by Booklist Review

McHarris, an assistant professor in the Frederick Douglass Institute and Department of Black Studies at the University of Rochester, illuminates the possibility of police abolition. Examining how countless people have encountered violent interactions with the police, McHarris attempts to address what a community can do when there is no police or policing, which has often been weaponized against Black, Latinx, Indigenous, poor, and other marginalized communities. He dives into the origins and expansion of policing and how policing systems were created for social control. Drawing on research, policy studies, and his own experiences, McHarris centers abolition as the solution to the enduring issue of police violence. He emphasizes bringing in community-led safety initiatives and practices of restorative and transformative justice, from redesigning roads to creating alternatives to punishment and policing. Through a critical lens on contemporary police reform and resistance movements, readers will find an inspiring and thought-provoking take on police reform, abolition, and the future of our communities.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A Black scholar imagines a world without police. Growing up in the Bronx, McHarris learned early in life that, despite their purported responsibility to promote public safety, the police were actually a danger to him and his Black friends and family. "I've been trying to avoid the police for as long as I can remember," he writes. This lifelong tendency to avoid police, as well as his extensive research for his dissertation for his doctorate in sociology and African American studies at Yale, led to his ability to imagine--and his commitment to advocate for--a society without police. McHarris begins his abolitionist argument with a short history of the American police force, connecting its origins to slave patrols, anti-Asian and anti-Mexican sentiments, and the genocide of Indigenous peoples. After thoroughly uncovering this deplorable history, the author traces the evolution of the police into its modern form, which evolved from the Reagan era war on drugs and continued with then-senator Biden's racist 1994 crime act. Crucially, McHarris describes these developments alongside alternatives to policing, ranging from modern movements in Miami, Minneapolis, and Philadelphia to historical movements like the "copwatch patrols" instituted by the Black Panthers. In the final section of the book, McHarris gets imaginative about what it might be like to live in a world without police, emphasizing that, in every community, safety is contingent on an equitable distribution of resources. "It's fundamentally a question of prioritizing lives and people over property and capital," he writes. The author's impressive expertise is matched only by his passion for his subject and commitment to radical imagination. While the text is occasionally repetitive, this is a compassionate, comprehensive, and practical guide to envisioning and creating a world free from the oppression and violence caused by police. A deeply researched, profoundly optimistic vision for a police-free future. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.