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CAPE: Abolition 101
Campaign Against Prison Expansion put on this excellent panel discussion on prison abolition in the UK.
Transformative Perspectives on Crime and Justice
The World Transformed hosted this excellent panel discussion on police, prisons and immigration enforcement with contributions from Blair Buchanan, Luke Hayes, Dr Tanzil Chowdhury, Rosalind Comyn, Rebecca Roberts, Divya Sundaram and Dr Patrick Williams.
What If Prisons Were Abolished?
In this video, Professor Ruth Wilson Gilmore examines what a society without prisons looks like. She examines the connections between slavery, racial capitalism and the prison industrial complex.
Towards an abolitionist drug policy reform
Imani Robinson notes that harm reduction’s foundations in a radical critique of punishment provides a platform to build alliances between movements that seek to dismantle the ‘war on drugs’ and other other carceral systems.
The war on drugs and the global colour line
In this excerpt from the panel entitled The Transmission Line: Empire & Abolition, Kojo Koram sheds light on how hegemonic approaches to drugs since the mid-19th century have served the expansion of the carceral state and imperialism.
Why stop and search should be abolished
The use of drug criminalisation as the legal basis for some 60% of all stops in England and Wales exemplifies the role of punitive drug policy in expanding the reach and harms of policing.
Women who use drugs and the violence of law enforcement
WHRIN and TalkingDrugs highlight how women and non-binary people who use drugs are developing responses to the harms at the intersection of gender and drug prohibition in ways that provide space to collectively heal and undermine systems of policing, punishment and surveillance.