2017
DOI: 10.15367/kf.v4i2.172
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<i>Incarcerating the Crisis: Freedom Struggles and the Rise of the Neoliberal State</i>, by Jordan T. Camp

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Cited by 8 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…2013; Seigel 2018; Vitale 2017). Another valuable line of inquiry applies a conjunctural analysis to explain how and why specific carceral initiatives emerge at specific moments of time to respond to particular social, political, and economic contradictions and crises associated with unfolding strategies of racial governance and capital accumulation (see Bonds 2019; Camp 2016; Danewid 2022; Gilmore 2007; Hall et al. 1978).…”
Section: Policing Incarceration and The Collective Circulation Of Harmmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2013; Seigel 2018; Vitale 2017). Another valuable line of inquiry applies a conjunctural analysis to explain how and why specific carceral initiatives emerge at specific moments of time to respond to particular social, political, and economic contradictions and crises associated with unfolding strategies of racial governance and capital accumulation (see Bonds 2019; Camp 2016; Danewid 2022; Gilmore 2007; Hall et al. 1978).…”
Section: Policing Incarceration and The Collective Circulation Of Harmmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Scholars in Indigenous, Black, Latinx, feminist, and settler colonial studies have long chronicled the ways in which surveillance, mapping, media, and computational technologies are implicated in the capture, distortion, and criminalization of liberation movements (Browne, 2015;Fanon, 1994;González, 2019;Hall, 1981;Crosby and Monaghan, 2018). These practices take many forms, including through the regulation of Black liberation movements' in Attica, Ferguson, Minneapolis, and Denver, among other global sites of resistance, to surveillance regimes deployed onto Indigenous lands rendering water and land protectors as criminals at the No-DAPL and Line 3 resistance camps, to the deputizing of white property bearing citizens to regulate Black, Latinx, and Asian neighborhoods through state sanctioned surveillance apps (Camp, 2016;Estes, 2019;Jefferson, 2017). The regulation of liberation movements and minoritized spaces rendered as capital frontier zones reflects the colonial entanglement of geographical knowledge.…”
Section: The Colonial Entanglement Of Visual-digital Geographic Knowl...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Contemporary abolitionists in the US understand their work as connected to a much longer historical arc of Black radical struggles, insurrections, and movements that sought to end slavery, racism, imperialism, colonialism, and capitalism (Camp, 2016;Heatherton, 2022b;Murch, 2022;Rodriguez, 2019;Sinha, 2016). Cedric Robinson termed this intergenerational commitment to Black freedom and liberation the Black Radical Tradition, a collective consciousness "informed by the historical struggles for liberation and motivated by the shared sense of obligation to preserve the collective being, the ontological totality" (2000: 171).…”
Section: The George Floyd Rebellion and Abolitionist Praxismentioning
confidence: 99%