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Citation

Gonzalez, Shannon Malone & Deckard, Faith M. (Online ahead of print). We Got Witnesses’: Black Women’s Counter Surveillance for Navigating Police Violence and Legal Estrangement. Social Problems.

Abstract

Police violence shapes the lives of racial and ethnic minorities, and while much has been written about strategic responses to police, missing is an examination of how black women navigate interactions with officers. Based on 32 interviews with black women, we find that they use witnessing, or the mobilization of others as observers to police encounters. Research demonstrates the rising role of videos and smartphones in documenting encounters with officers. We find that black women adapt witnessing techniques based on their surroundings, available resources, and network contacts. Three forms of witnessing are observed: physical witnessing, mobilizing others in close proximity to interactions with officers; virtual witnessing, using cellphone or social media technology to contact others or record interactions with officers; and institutional witnessing, leveraging police or other institutional contacts as interveners to interactions with officers. Black women mobilize witnessing to deescalate violence, gather evidence, and promote accountability. Attuned to both the interactional and structural dynamics of police encounters, black women conceptualize witnessing as a way to survive police encounters and navigate their legal estrangement within the carceral system. We theorize black women’s witnessing as a form of resistance as they work to reconfigure short- and long-term power relations between themselves, their communities, and police.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1093/socpro/spac043

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

Online ahead of print

Journal Title

Social Problems

Author(s)

Gonzalez, Shannon Malone
Deckard, Faith M.

Article Type

Regular

Continent/Country

United States of America

State

Nonspecific

Race/Ethnicity

Black

Sex/Gender

Women