Tag
Abolition
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“Radical Powers of Metamorphosis”: On Global Black Cinema
As we follow the camera’s quiet, careful study, we observe—as Fred Moten reflects—that the slave ship also contains the means of its own undoing.
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“Independence and Abolition Went Hand in Hand”: Julia Gaffield on Jean-Jacques Dessalines
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Minimalism Forces You to Imagine: Speaking with Benji Hart and Anna Martine Whitehead
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Breaking the Cycle: Laurence Ralph on “Sito: An American Teenager and the City That Failed Him”
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The New Geography of the Carceral State
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Connecting Dots to Challenge E-Carceration
Whether tracking a migrant traveling thousands of miles or someone on parole at home, carceral tech is reaching into all walks of life.
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Prison Tech Comes Home
Landlords’, bosses’ and schools’ intrusion of surveillance technologies into the home extends the carceral state into domestic space.
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How Words Lead to Justice
What words politicians say matters. But which words they use is often the result not of individual choices, but of collective action over years.
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Spatial Abolition and Disability Justice
Revealing the multiple histories of disability justice can expand how we think of and design the places we build.
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We Can’t Look Away from the Courts: An Interview with Matthew Clair
“I see disadvantaged defendants’ cultivated expertise as accurate, even though it is often invalidated and punished.”[none-for-homepage]
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The Poetics of Abolition
For poet Honorée Fanonne Jeffers, as for the Black Romantics, history is the repetition of anti-Black violence that has yet to be abolished.














