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41 Shots ... and Counting - What Amadou Diallo's Story Teaches Us about Policing, Race, and Justice (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R544
Discovery Miles 5 440
You Save: R131
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41 Shots ... and Counting - What Amadou Diallo's Story Teaches Us about Policing, Race, and Justice (Hardcover)
Series: Syracuse Studies on Peace and Conflict Resolution
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List price R675
Loot Price R544
Discovery Miles 5 440
You Save R131 (19%)
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When four New York City police officers killed Amadou Diallo in
1999, the forty-one shots they fired echoed loudly across the
nation. In death, Diallo joined a long list of young men of color
killed by police fire in cities and towns all across America.
Through innuendos of criminality, many of these victims could be
discredited and, by implication, held responsible for their own
deaths. But Diallo was an innocent, a young West African immigrant
doing nothing more suspicious than returning home to his Bronx
apartment after working hard all day in the city. Protesters took
to the streets, successfully demanding that the four white officers
be brought to trial. When the officers were acquitted, however,
horrified onlookers of all races and ethnicities despaired of
justice. In ""41 Shots...and Counting"", Beth Roy offers an oral
history of Diallo's death. Through interviews with members of the
community, with police officers and lawyers, with government
officials and mothers of young men in jeopardy, the book traces the
political and racial dynamics that placed the officers outside
Diallo's house that night, their fingers on symbolic as well as
actual triggers. With lucid analysis, Roy explores events in the
courtroom, in city hall, in the streets, and in the police
precinct, revealing the interlacing conflict dynamics. ""41
Shots...and Counting"" allows the reader to consider the
implications of the Diallo case for our national discourses on
politics, race, class, crime, and social justice.
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