Read the Introduction.
Amadou Diallo, Abner Louima, Anthony Baez, Patrick Dorismond.
New York City has been rocked in recent years by the fate of these
four men at the hands of the police. But police brutality in New
York City is a multi-dimensional phenomenon that refers not only to
the hyperviolent response of white male police officers as in these
cases, but to an entire set of practices that target homeless
people, vendors, and sexual minorities.
The complexity of the problem requires a commensurate response,
which Zero Tolerance fulfills with a range of scholarship and
activism. Offering perspectives from law and society, women's
studies, urban and cultural studies, labor history, and the visual
arts, the essays assembled here complement, and provide a
counterpoint, to the work of police scholars on this subject.
Framed as both a response and a challenge to official claims
that intensified law enforcement has produced New York City's
declining crime rates, Zero Tolerance instead posits a definition
of police brutality more encompassing than the use of excessive
physical force. Further, it develops the connections between the
most visible and familiar forms of police brutality that have
sparked a new era of grassroots community activism, and the
day-to-day violence that accompanies the city's campaign to police
the "quality of life."
Contributors include: Heather Barr, Paul G. Chevigny, Derrick
Bell, Tanya Erzen, Dayo F. Gore, Amy S. Green, Paul Hoffman, Andrew
Hsiao, Tamara Jones, Joo-Hyun Kang, Andrea McArdle, Bradley
McCallum, Andrew Ross, Eric Tang, Jacqueline Tarry, Sasha Torres,
and Jennifer R. Wynn.
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