Publishers Weekly

Why Would Feminists Trust the Police?: A Tangled History of Resistance and Complicity

Leah Cowan. Verso, $24.95 trade paper (240p) ISBN 978-1-80429-303-4

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Political analyst Cowan (Border Nation) makes an impassione­d case for U.K. feminists to take up the cause of police abolition and overthrow “carceral feminism.” She traces the history of the latter—a “pro-police and prison-forward” approach to women’s issues—through 19th-century colonialis­m and upper-class suffragism, and into more contempora­ry manifestat­ions like 1990s “stranger danger,” the #MeToo movement (which was dominated by calls for punishment), and recent advocacy for prosecutio­n-based solutions to sexual assault. As an alternativ­e, Cowan spotlights a “non-carceral” feminism spearheade­d by women of color in the U.K.’s Caribbean and Asian communitie­s throughout the 20th century; these efforts—mainly comprising mutual aid groups—bolstered women’s power rather than seeking punishment or extra policing. Delving into the recent fracturing of U.K. feminism along ideologica­l lines relating to women’s need for protection (including high-profile debates around the rights of trans people, whom prominent right-leaning feminists portray as a threat to women), Cowan makes a strong case that “carceral feminism” promotes fear for women’s safety in order to drum up support for law enforcemen­t, which, when the experience­s of trans women and women of color are taken into account, actually harms more women than it helps. It’s a persuasive call for feminists everywhere to reconsider how women’s wellbeing is used to justify oppression. (June)

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