Thanks to a retweet from Tressie McMillan Cottom (one of the best academic wranglers of the blue bird), I got transported back to my days as a Ph.D. student at the CUNY Grad Center.
The editors of POLICING THE PLANET present their top 5 books on broken windowshttps://t.co/XyfJ0ax1On pic.twitter.com/Qb58meoirR
— Verso Books (@VersoBooks) May 25, 2016
Verso Books (which has a very impressive Twitter presence, by the way) had the editors of Policing the Planet share their top 5 books about the broken windows theory of crime. I was intrigued and followed the link—nothing competes with a 90s cover of Time magazine for clickbait—and was struck by the first book on the list:
Neil Smith's THE NEW URBAN FRONTIER is "a peerless primer for understanding 'broken windows policing'" pic.twitter.com/uU9gxrCRnl
— Verso Books (@VersoBooks) May 25, 2016
The late Neil Smith‘s The New Urban Frontier: Gentrification and the Revanchist City topped the list! That may have been the most formative book I read during grad school, and if I was smarter I would have taken the work I did with Smith on using 80s and 90s films to analyze the popular representation of gentrification pop culture and turned it into a dissertation. My official focus was on Early American impulses towards Imperialism, but my heart was always stuck in 80s. In fact, long after I dropped out of the CUNY Ph.D. program in English I published my paper on the topic on my vanity press of a blog: “Of Punks, Pimps, and CHUDs: Gentrification in NYC as told by 1980s Film.” I’m still sentimental about that one, and one of these days I need to return to it and replace some of the YouTube clips from the various films they so inconveniently took down.
Not only was it cool to a book near and dear to my heart inform current scholarship and resistance around policing the city. I was also struck by how effectively Verso uses Twitter not only to promote their books, but also share some great related titles. For example, the other four books that inspired the editors of Policing the Planet were (drumroll please)….
Delaney's TIMES SQUARE RED, TIMES SQUARE BLUE "shows how broken windows claimed its most hollow victory" pic.twitter.com/rA9g7ZHnAD
— Verso Books (@VersoBooks) May 25, 2016
Hanhardt's SAFE SPACE "offers a queer history of LGBT activism in the context of gentrification and policing" pic.twitter.com/RnfZwzzRxE
— Verso Books (@VersoBooks) May 25, 2016
Bernard Harcourt's ILLUSION OF ORDER: "This is the book that debunked the broken windows metaphor" pic.twitter.com/HRYviNtI1V
— Verso Books (@VersoBooks) May 25, 2016
ZERO TOLERANCE is a critical anthology that "offers a valuable resource chronicling an earlier wave of activism" pic.twitter.com/o5U6Ghommr
— Verso Books (@VersoBooks) May 25, 2016
This is a solid list for anyone interested in a critical analysis of the history of policing, and I was struck how Verso made it interesting, accessible, and memorable. As I blog for the CUNY Academic Commons I find myself thinking about how this works. Is there a space where folks are promoting the various scholarship happening at the Grad Center? I mean Neil Smith has a rich history at the Grad Center, and Verso reminded me of that, what is the Academic Commons doing to regularly highlight the scholarship coming out of CUNY’s think tank?
Great questions! I think the potential of the Commons will only be increased to the degree that it can extend the research and teaching work of our community members. We have a pretty big planning project in the works that aims to tie CUNY’s institutional repository, CUNY Academic Works, to the Commons; more on that soon!
Matt,
I wonder if that a series for the blog, podcast, videocast, etc. I think one of the limits of my own thinking has been to imagine this stuff as digital rather than just blogging the awesome work folks are often doing in isolation. And that isn’t always digital, but we can use the digital to put it front and center. I guess this question is as much for me, and my role with the Commons as anything else-just to be clear about that.