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Displaying 271 - 280 of 1294

Volume 89.2 (March 2022) 315–580

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/volume-892-march-2022-315-580
Essays Symposium Introduction: This Violent City? Urban Violence in Chicago and Beyond

Symposium Introduction: This Violent City? Urban Violence in Chicago and Beyond

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/print-archive/symposium-introduction-violent-city-urban-violence-chicago-and-beyond
Our modest goal in this Introduction is to assemble some baseline empirics concerning both private violence and state coercion to provide a context for the pieces that follow. In so doing, we aim to mitigate the need for “scene setting” by each paper in the Symposium. Readers of the Symposium will find here a synoptic guide to some basic facts about the distribution and extent of criminal violence, as well as socioeconomic conditions and police activity, in Chicago.

The Enduring Neighborhood Effect, Everyday Urban Mobility, and Violence in Chicago

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/print-archive/enduring-neighborhood-effect-everyday-urban-mobility-and-violence-chicago
A longstanding tradition of research linking neighborhood disadvantage to higher rates of violence is based on the characteristics of where people reside. This Essay argues that we need to look beyond residential neighborhoods to consider flows of movement throughout the wider metropolis.

Neighborhood Inequality and Violence in Chicago, 1965–2020

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/print-archive/neighborhood-inequality-and-violence-chicago-1965-2020
This Essay analyzes trends in violence from a spatial perspective, focusing on how changes in the murder rate are experienced by communities and groups of residents within the city of Chicago. The Essay argues that a spatial perspective is essential to understanding the causes and consequences of violence in the United States and begins by describing the social policies and theoretical mechanisms that explain the connection between concentrated disadvantage and violent crime.

Prospects for Reform? The Collapse of Community Policing in Chicago

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/print-archive/prospects-reform-collapse-community-policing-chicago
Community policing’s accomplishments were numerous, but it fell victim to issues commonly facing reform: money—especially the impact of economic downturns; leadership turnover and policy preferences; changes in the social, political, and crime environments; and the emergence of new technologies for responding to community concerns.

Capitalizing on Crisis: Chicago Policy Responses to Homicide Waves, 1920–2016

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/print-archive/capitalizing-crisis-chicago-policy-responses-homicide-waves-1920-2016
This Essay investigates Chicago city-government policy responses to the four largest homicide waves in its history: 1920–1925, 1966–1970, 1987–1992, and 2016. Through spatial and historical methods, we discover that Chicago police and the mayor’s office misused data to advance agendas conceived prior to the start of the homicide waves.

Identifying and Measuring Excessive and Discriminatory Policing

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/print-archive/identifying-and-measuring-excessive-and-discriminatory-policing
We describe and apply three empirical approaches to identify superfluous police activity, unjustified racially disparate impacts, and limits to regulatory interventions.

Racially Territorial Policing in Black Neighborhoods

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/print-archive/racially-territorial-policing-black-neighborhoods
This Essay explores police practices that marginalize Black people by limiting their freedom of movement across the spaces of Black neighborhoods.

Barbed Wire Fences: The Structural Violence of Education Law

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/print-archive/barbed-wire-fences-structural-violence-education-law
In this Essay, I argue that, in urban metros like Chicago, poor Black children are victims of not just gun violence but also the structural violence of systemic educational stratification.

An Abolitionist Critique of Violence

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/print-archive/abolitionist-critique-violence
This article proceeds by engaging the critical reflections, writing, organizing, and imaginative visions of contemporary abolitionists who are confronting the sources of violence by building solidaristic and equitable economic alternatives, proliferating peaceful and constructive approaches to violence that do not rely on militarized criminal law enforcement, working to reallocate resources from militarism toward human flourishing, and to commence a just transition to more environmentally sustainable forms of organizing human life on earth.

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