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Book Presentation “Becoming Abolitionists”

Published: February 22, 2023; Author: Julia Sonrisa

 March 1, 2023    04:00 PM-05:30 PM EDT

Address: Buell Hall, New York, 10027, United States

Book Presentation “Becoming Abolitionists”

For more than a century, activists in the United States have tried to reform the police. From community policing initiatives to increasing diversity, none of it has stopped the police from killing about three people a day. Millions of people continue to protest police violence because these “solutions” do not match the problem: the police cannot be reformed.

Here, Derecka Purnell will speak to the main arguments in her new book, Becoming Abolitionists, and engage with abolition collective members and the audience to workshop ideas about envisioning new systems that work to address the root causes of violence.

*Copies of Becoming Abolitionists will be available for purchase following the event*

Co-Presenters: The Center for Gender & Sexuality Law, the Studio for Law & Culture, the Columbia Center for Contemporary Critical Thought and Initiative for a Just Society, Institute for Research in African-American Studies, and the Columbia University African American and African Diaspora Studies Department.

Important Information

Seating is available on a first-come first-served basis, RSVPs do not guarantee admission.

All attendees must show either a CU/BC ID (affiliates) or vaccination record (non-affiliate) for entry to the event.

Speaker Bio

Derecka Purnell is a human rights lawyer, researcher, and author of Becoming Abolitionists: Police, Protests, and the Pursuit of Freedom. She works to end police and prison violence by providing legal assistance, research, and training in community-based organizations through an abolitionist framework.

As a Skadden Fellow, she helped to build the Justice Project at Advancement Project’s National Office, which focused on consent decrees, police and prosecutor accountability, and jail closures. In the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, Purnell co-created the COVID-19 Policing Project at the Community Resource Hub for Safety Accountability. The project tracks police arrests, harassment, citations, and other enforcement through public health orders related to the pandemic.

Purnell received her JD from Harvard Law School, her BA from the University of Missouri- Kansas City, and studied public policy and economics at the University of California- Berkeley as a Public Policy and International Affairs Law Fellow. Her writing has been published widely, including in The Oxford Handbook of Race and Law in the United States (forthcoming), The Harvard Journal of African American Policy, The New York Times, The Atlantic, The New York Magazine, Boston Review, Teen Vogue, and Harper’s Bazaar. Purnell has lectured, studied, and strategized around social movements across the United States, The Netherlands, Belgium, South Africa, the United Kingdom, and Australia.

She is currently a columnist at The Guardian and a Scholar-in-Residence at Columbia Law School.

Time: 4:00 PM — 5:30 PM EST

Free!

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