监狱清算与二十一世纪美国废囚运动:反监狱斗争中的代际斗争

Zhandarka Kurti, Michelle Brown
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在一场全球性流行病中,种族主义国家暴力的场面点燃了近代史上最大的黑人领导的多种族抗议运动之一。乔治·弗洛伊德叛乱将废奴主义政治从边缘推向了美国政治生活的主流。在几个月的时间里,废奴主义取代了自由主义改革奴隶制国家的愿景。虽然重要的学术工作继续强调产生如此广泛抵制美国惩罚制度的社会和历史背景,但很少有人关注废奴主义如何以及为什么获得如此主流的接受。我们认为,21世纪废奴主义者对奴隶制国家危机的回应之所以能够成功地成为主流,是因为大多数黑人和棕色人种的组织者与警察和监禁作斗争的代际和代际经验。随着新的废奴主义力量通过重要的转变、方法和新想象的自由形式,对监禁国家及其主要机构进行清算,这些运动需要在惩罚研究中提出新的问题:21世纪废奴主义者在建立反对警察和监狱的代际运动时,正在与之抗争的紧张和矛盾是什么?废奴主义的遗产如何影响我们作为学者和活动家的工作?政治清算如何重新调整政治教育和政治斗争?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Carceral reckoning and twenty-first century US abolition movements: Generational struggles in the fight against prisons
The spectacle of racist state violence in the middle of a global pandemic was the spark that ignited one of the largest Black led and multiracial protest movements in recent history. The George Floyd rebellion propelled abolitionist politics from the margins to the mainstream of American political life. In the span of a few months, abolitionism supplanted liberal visions of reforming the carceral state. While important academic work continues to highlight the social and historical context that produced such widespread resistance to the American punishment regime, very little attention has been paid to how and why abolitionism gained such mainstream acceptance. We argue that the successful mainstreaming of the twenty-first century abolitionist response to the crisis of the carceral state is due to generational and intergenerational experiences of mostly Black and Brown organizers fighting against policing and incarceration. As new abolitionism forces reckonings with the carceral state and its major institutions, through important shifts, methodologies, and newly imagined forms of freedom, these movements necessitate new questions in the study of punishment: What are the tensions and contradictions that twenty-first century abolitionists are contending with as they build intergenerational movements against policing and prisons? How does the abolitionist legacy inform the work that we do as scholars and activists? How does the carceral reckoning realign political education and struggle?
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