Kimberly Jones Analyzes How We Can Win Against Structural Police Violence
Kimberly Jones analyzes How We Can Win Against Structural Police Violence
Kimberly Jones analyzes How We Can Win Against Structural Police Violence
Karen D. Taylor reports on the safety of her sons.
pdf of the book, Warfare in the American Homeland: Policing and Prison in a Penal Democracy, ed. Joy James
The 1951 text, We Charge Genocide: The Crime of Government Against the Negro People, by William L Patterson, 1970, presents the historic petition to the United Nations for Relief From a Crime of The United States Government Against the Negro People.
Dr. Delia Douglas writes about antiblack racism in Canada.
The Global Prison Abolitionist Coalition emerged from dialogues between organizations such as the Alliance of Middle Eastern and North African Socialists, Lausan Hong Kong, the Emergency Committee for Rojava, various Brazilian socialist and anti-racist organizations, Socialist Workers Alliance of Guyana Abolitionist Collective of Canada/U.S., Black and Pink, along with various Egyptian, Indian, Kashmiri, Kurdish, Turkish, Palestinian, and U.S. socialist activist-scholars, and prominent abolitionist scholar/activists among them are Dr. Romarilyn Ralston and Dr. Joy James. The formation of this coalition was compelled by the need to connect the struggles of political and social prisoners around the world. Here the coalition provides its statement of purpose.
A segment of The Real News Interview about hunger strikes, uprisings, and the politics of who gets released from prison. Joy James features as an interviewee.