种族暴力、白人空间和邻里脆弱性

IF 2.4 3区 社会学 Q1 SOCIOLOGY City & Community Pub Date : 2020-09-22 DOI:10.1111/cico.12521
Bruce D. Haynes
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摘要

我曾经是警察慈善协会的忠实支持者。只需25美元的捐款,当地PBA就会发放一个带有徽章状徽章的贴纸,你可以把它贴在驾驶员侧后门窗户上。这表明你是一个“纳税公民”,有工作,站在法律的正确一边。作为一个年轻的黑人,我当时怀疑贴纸也表明我通过家人或朋友与执法部门有联系。我做到了。我父亲是南布朗克斯的一名假释官,我从小就尊重法律和执行法律的人。但这并不是我支持PBA的原因。得到一个贴花就像一个护身符,希望能将我与警察拦下的其他黑人区分开来,为我提供某种程度的保护,使我免受潜在的虐待。我20多岁时搬到扬克斯郊区,第一次向PBA捐款。我30多岁时加入纽黑文耶鲁大学,然后40多岁时穿越海岸加入加州大学戴维斯分校。尽管这些年来我被拦了几十次,通常没有任何明确的理由,但我从未被警察粗暴对待或欺负过。我的一些朋友就没那么幸运了。早在1995年,也就是我为博士论文辩护的那一年,我的篮球好友、《黑人企业》杂志负责广告和营销的高级副总裁小厄尔·G·格雷夫斯在纽约宾夕法尼亚车站被震撼了。格雷夫斯穿着全套商务装,手里拿着橙汁,在一个工作日的清晨下了地铁北线的火车,不知怎么引起了警方的怀疑。《纽约时报》报道称,格雷夫斯被两名Metro North警察搭讪,并迅速推到附近的墙上,当时他们“……把我的胳膊举到空中,从公文包里拿出来,从上到下搜查我。”,其中一些人拿着他们的“杀人执照”。然而,作为一个来自哈莱姆区的自大少年,我曾经觉得整个城市都是我的游乐场。在我十几岁的时候,很多时候
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Racial Violence, White Spaces, and Neighborhood Vulnerability
I used to be a faithful supporter of the Policeman Benevolent Association. For just a $25 contribution, the local PBA would issue a decal with a badge-like insignia that you could affix to the driver’s side backdoor window. It signaled that you were a “tax paying citizen,” employed, and on the right side of the law. As a young black man, I suspected at the time that the decal also signaled that I had connections, through family or friends, to law enforcement. Which I did. My father was a parole officer in the South Bronx, and I grew up with respect for the law and the people who enforced it. But that’s not why I made a point of supporting the PBA. Getting a decal served as a talisman, distinguishingme, hopefully, from other blackmen that the police would pull over, providing me with some measure of protection from potential abuse. I mademy first donation to the PBA when Imoved to the suburbs of Yonkers in my late twenties. I continued payments into my thirties, when I joined the faculty at Yale University in New Haven, and then into my forties, when I crossed coasts to join to faculty at the University of California, Davis. Although I’ve been stopped dozens of times over the years, often without any clear reason, I’ve never been roughed up or bullied by the police. Some of my friends have not been so lucky. Back in 1995, the year I defended my doctoral dissertation, Earl G. Graves Jr.—my basketball buddy and the senior vice president for advertising and marketing at Black Enterprise magazine—was shaken down at New York’s Penn Station. Dressed in full business attire, holding an orange juice in his hand, and stepping off a Metro-North train on an early workday morning, Graves somehow aroused the suspicions of the police. The New York Times reported that Graves was accosted and quickly hustled to a nearby wall by two Metro-North police officers as they “...lifted my arms in the air, relieved me of my briefcase and frisked me from top to bottom.” Growing up black in the city, you had to learn to circumvent unwelcoming (and often white) neighborhoods as well as crooked beat cops in your own neighborhood, some of whom who took their “license to kill” personally. Yet as a cocky teenager from Harlem, I used to feel like the entire city was my playground. In my mid-teens, many a time my
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City & Community
City & Community Multiple-
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8.00%
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27
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