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31+ Obras 404 Miembros 8 Reseñas 1 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Victoria Law is the author of Resistance Behind Bars and coauthor of Prison by Any Other Name. Her writings about prisons and other forms of confinement have appeared in numerous publications, including the New York limes, The Nation, Wired, and Truthout. She is a cofounder of Books Through mostrar más Bars-NYC and the longtime editor of the zine Tenacious: Art and Writings by Women in Prison. She lives in New York City with her daughter. mostrar menos

Incluye los nombres: Vikki Law, Vikki Law, Victoria Law

Créditos de la imagen: Photo by Jen Cleary

Obras de Victoria Law

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Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Otros nombres
Law, Vikki
Fecha de nacimiento
1975
Género
female
Lugares de residencia
New York, New York, USA
Agente
Hannah Bowman (Liza Dawson Assoc.)

Miembros

Reseñas

absolutely required reading for anyone who's starting to think about abolition/restorative justice/transformative justice. really accessible and thought provoking, and as an added bonus there's a list of further reading at the end for when you inevitably rip through this and instantly want to go deeper.
 
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bisexuality | 2 reseñas más. | Mar 3, 2024 |
Note: I accessed a digital review copy of this book through Edelweiss.
 
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fernandie | 2 reseñas más. | Sep 15, 2022 |
Eye Opening Yet Flawed. From a standard sociological talking point side, this book is eye opening yet also perfectly in-line (almost within perfect lock-step, in fact) with current sociological understanding - or at least my own understanding of current sociological understanding. (And this, from a guy that *long ago* presented at a sociological conference as a college freshman - just to establish that I do in fact have a *modicum* of academic understanding here. ;) ) In the forward, Michelle Alexander shows that despite the years, her own blinders and biases are still perfectly in place - but also sets the overall tone for the book. In short, this does for government controls outside the actual mass incarceration system what Alexander's The New Jim Crow did for the mass incarceration system and what Radley Balko's Rise of the Warrior Cop did for the actual history of police militarization and brutality in the US. Indeed, ultimately this is a book that belongs in the same libraries and conversations as those two magnum opuses as a definitive text on the issue that every single person in America needs to read. Yes, it is *that* powerful, even for someone who has read both of the aforementioned books, who has been an activist for quite some time, and know knows more about these issues than many, perhaps most, people currently talking about them in media (either professional or social).

Its critical flaws are similar to Alexanders' own: it has a near laser focus on race as the root cause. Where this book gains the extra star above Alexander's book is that key word "near". Schenwar and Law do a commendable job of listing other leading causes of these issues - chiefly, being poor no matter the color of your skin - even while most often listing race as the most common cause. At that point, I'm more willing to call six of one/ half a dozen of the other, it is so well balanced here.

But arguably the biggest flaw of the book is that even while constantly preaching about the perils of government control systems, it still manages to advocate for *more*... government control systems, simply targeting other people. Even as it preaches community and alternatives to police, prison, and the various systems described in the book, it still ultimately demands ever more government programs rather than the true community Schenwar and Law claim to want. Rather than praising Anarchy and demanding a complete overthrow of the very government systems that cause the very problems they so accurately describe, they ultimately choose to love Big Brother even while asking him to be a little bit nicer.

And just as this ending is the ultimate tragedy of Orwell's 1984, so too it is the ultimate tragedy of this otherwise stupendous polemic. Recommended.
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BookAnonJeff | 2 reseñas más. | Jul 11, 2021 |
Just so excellent. Law lays out the truth about each myth, from those that are perhaps obvious to people familiar with arguments against prisons to ones that I still hear repeated frequently by abolitionists (myths about slave labor in prisons!) It's wildly accessible, and does a great job of combining short chapters with a great deal of citation and also extra reading. You could absolutely use this in a classroom with high schoolers, in college classrooms, and you should DEFINITELY read it in reading groups about PIC abolition. I've heard Law note that this book pairs very neatly with Prison By Any Other Name which she co-wrote with Maya Schenwar as she was writing this book, and I would strongly agree. Start with this, and then read that!… (más)
 
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aijmiller | 2 reseñas más. | Jul 9, 2021 |

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