The Challenge of Prison Abolition: A Conversation.
Davis, Angela Y. ; Rodriguez, Dylan
Dylan: Your emergence as a radical prison activist was deeply
influenced by your experience as a prisoner. Could you talk a bit about
how imprisonment affected your political formation, and the impact that
it had on your eventual identification as prison abolitionists?
Angela: The time I spent in jail was both an outcome of my work on
prison issues and a profound influence on my subsequent trajectory as a
prison activist. When I was arrested in the summer of 1970 in connection
with my involvement in the campaign to free George Jackson and the
Soledad Brothers, I was one of many activists who had been previously
active in defense movements. In editing the anthology, If They Come in
the Morning (1971) while I was in jail, Bettina Aptheker and I attempted
to draw upon the organizing and legal experiences associated with a vast
number of contemporary campaigns to free political prisoners. The most
important lessons emanating from those campaigns, we thought,
demonstrated the need to examine the overall role of the prison system,
especially its class and racial character. There was a relationship, as
George Jackson had insisted, between the rising numbers of political
prisoners and the imprisonment of increasing numbers of poor people of
color. If prison was the state-sanctioned destination for activists such
as myself, it was also used as a surrogate solution to social problems
associated with poverty and racism. Although imprisonment was equated
with rehabilitation in the dominant discourse at that time, it was
obvious to us that its primary purpose was repression. Along with other
radical activists of that era, we thus began to explore what it might
mean to combine our call for the freedom of political prisoners with an
embryonic call for the abolition of prisons. Of course we had not yet
thought through all of the implications of such a position, but today it
seems that what was viewed at that time as political naivete, the
untheorized and utopian impulses of young people trying to be
revolutionary, foreshadowed what was to become, at the turn of the
century, the important project of critically examining the political
economy of a prison system, whose unrestrained growth urgently needs to
be reversed.
Dylan: What interests me is the manner in which your trial -- and
the rather widespread social movement that enveloped it, along with
other political trials -- enabled a wide variety of activists to
articulate a radical critique of U.S. jurisprudence and imprisonment.
The strategic framing of yours and others' individual political
biographies within a broader set of social and historical forces --
state violence, racism, white supremacy, patriarchy, the growth and
transformation of U.S. capitalism -- disrupted the logic of the criminal
justice apparatus in a fundamental way. Turning attention away from
conventional notions of "crime" as isolated, individual
instances of misbehavior necessitated a basic questioning of the
conditions that cast "criminality" as a convenient political
rationale for the warehousing of large numbers of poor, disenfranchised,
and displaced black people and other people of color. Many activists are
now referring to imprisonment as a new form of slavery, refocusing
attention on the hi storical function of the 13th Amendment in
reconstructing enslavement as a punishment reserved for those "duly
convicted." Yet, when we look more closely at the emergence of the
prison-industrial complex, the language of enslavement fails to the
extent that it relies on the category of forced labor as its basic
premise. People frequently forget that the majority of imprisoned people
are not workers, and that work is itself made available only as a
"privilege" for the most favored prisoners. The logic of the
prison-industrial complex is closer to what you, George Jackson, and
others were forecasting back then as mass containment, the effective
elimination of large numbers of (poor, black) people from the realm of
civil society. Yet, the current social impact of the prison-industrial
complex must have been virtually unfathomable 30 years ago. One could
make the argument that the growth of this massive structure has met or
exceeded the most ominous forecasts of people who, at that time, could
barely have imagine d that at the turn of the century two million people
would be encased in a prison regime that is far more sophisticated and
repressive than it was at the onset of Nixon's presidency, when
about 150,000 people were imprisoned nationally in decrepit, overcrowded
buildings. So in a sense, your response to the first question echoes the
essential truth of what was being dismissed, in your words, as the
paranoid "political naivete" of young radical activists in the
early 1970s. I think we might even consider the formation of prison
abolitionism as a logical response to this new human warehousing
strategy. In this vein, could you give a basic summary of the
fundamental principles underlying the contemporary prison abolitionist
movement?
Angela: First of all, I must say that I would hesitate to
characterize the contemporary prison abolition movement as a homogeneous
and united international effort to displace the institution of the
prison. For example, the International Conference on Penal Abolition
(ICOPA), which periodically brings scholars and activists together from
Europe, South America, Australia, Africa, and North America, reveals the
varied nature of this movement. Dorsey Nunn, former prisoner and
longtime activist, has a longer history of involvement with ICOPA than I
do since he attended the conference in New Zealand three years ago. My
first direct contact with ICOPA was this past May, when I attended the
Toronto gathering.
Dylan: Was there anything about ICOPA that particularly impressed
you?
Angela: The ICOPA conference in Toronto revealed some of the major
strengths and weaknesses of the abolitionist movement. First of all,
despite the rather homogenous character of their circle, they have
managed to keep the notion of abolitionism alive precisely at a time
when developing radical alternatives to the prison-industrial complex is
becoming a necessity. That is to say, abolitionism should not now be
considered an unrealizable utopian dream, but rather the only possible
way to halt the further transnational development of prison industries.
That ICOPA claims supporters in Europe and Latin America is an
indication of what is possible. However, the racial homogeneity of
ICOPA, and the related failure to incorporate an analysis of race into
the theoretical framework of their version of abolitionism, is a major
weakness. The conference demonstrated that while faith-based approaches
to the abolition of penal systems can be quite powerful, organizing
strategies must go much further. We need to develop and popularize the
kinds of analyses that explain why people of color predominate in prison
populations throughout the world and how this structural racism is
linked to the globalization of capital.
Dylan: Yes, I found that the political vision of ICOPA was
extraordinarily limited, especially considering its professed commitment
to a more radical abolitionist analysis and program. This undoubtedly
had a lot to do with the underlying racism of the organization itself,
which was reflected in the language of some of the conference
resolutions: "We support all transformative measures which enable
us to live better in community with those we as a society find most
difficult, and most consistently marginalize or exclude" (emphasis
added). A major figure in ICOPA even accused a small group of people of
color in attendance of being "racist" when they attempted to
constructively criticize the overwhelming white homogeneity of the
conference and the need for creative strategies to engage communities of
color in such an important political discussion. Several black
student-activists I met at ICOPA told me how alienated they felt at the
conference, especially when they realized that the ICOPA organizers had
never at tempted to contact the Toronto-based organizations with which
these student-activists were working: a major black
anti-police-brutality coalition, a black prisoner support organization,
etc. So I certainly share your frustrations with ICOPA. At the same
time, I find myself wondering how a new political formation of prison
abolitionism can form in such a reactionary national and global climate.
You have been involved with a variety of prison movements for the last
30 years, so maybe you can help me out. How do you think about this new
political challenge within a broader historical perspective?
Angela: There are multiple histories of prison abolition. The
Scandinavian scholar/activist Thomas Mathieson first published his
germinal text, The Politics of Abolition, in 1974, when activist
movements were calling for the disestablishment of prisons -- in the
aftermath of the Attica Rebellion and prison uprisings throughout
Europe. He was concerned with transforming prison reform movements into
more radical movements to abolish prisons as the major institutions of
punishment. There was a pattern of decarceration in the Netherlands
until the mid 1980s, which seemed to establish the Dutch system as a
model prison system, and the later rise in prison construction and the
expansion of the incarcerated population has served to stimulate
abolitionist ideas. Criminologist Willem de Haan published a book in
1990 entitled The Politics of Redress: Crime, Punishment, and Penal
Abolition. One of the most interesting texts, from the point of view of
U.S. activist history is Fay Honey Knopp's volume Instead of
Prison: A Handbook for Prison Abolitionists, which was published in
1976, with funding from the American Friends. This handbook points out
the contradictory relationship between imprisonment and an
"enlightened, free society." Prison abolition, like the
abolition of slavery, is a long-range goal and the handbook argues that
an abolitionist approach requires an analysis of "crime" that
links it with social structures, as opposed to individual pathology, as
well as "anticrime" strategies that focus on the provision of
social resources. Of course, there are many versions of prison
abolitionism -- including those that propose to abolish punishment
altogether and replace it with reconciliatory responses to criminal
acts. In my opinion, the most powerful relevance of abolitionist theory
and practice today resides in the fact that without a radical position
vis-a-vis the rapidly expanding prison system, prison architecture,
prison surveillance, and prison system corporatization, prison culture,
with all its racist and totali tarian implications, will continue not
only to claim ever increasing numbers of people of color, but also to
shape social relations more generally in our society. Prison needs to be
abolished as the dominant mode of addressing social problems that are
better solved by other institutions and other means. The call for prison
abolition urges us to imagine and strive for a very different social
landscape.
Dylan: I think you make a subtle but important point here: prison
and penal abolition imply an analysis of society that illuminates the
repressive logic, as well as the fascistic historical trajectory, of the
prison's growth as a social and industrial institution.
Theoretically and politically, this "radical position," as you
call it, introduces a new set of questions that does not necessarily
advocate a pragmatic "alternative" or a concrete and immediate
"solution" to what currently exists. In fact, I think this is
an entirely appropriate position to assume when dealing with a policing
and jurisprudence system that inherently disallows the asking of such
fundamental questions as: Why are some lives considered more disposable
than others under the weight of police policy and criminal law? How have
we arrived at a place where killing is valorized and defended when it is
organized by the state -- I'm thinking about the street lynchings
of Diallo and Dorismond in New York City, the bombing of the MOVE
organizati on in Philadelphia in 1985, the ongoing bombing of Iraqi
civilians by the United States -- yet viciously avenged (by the state)
when committed by isolated individuals? Why have we come to associate
community safety and personal security with the degree to which the
state exercises violence through policing and criminal justice?
You've written elsewhere that the primary challenge for penal
abolitionists in the United States is to construct a political language
and theoretical discourse that disarticulates crime from punishment. In
a sense, this implies a principled refusal to pander to the typically
pragmatist impulse to demand absolute answers and solutions right now to
a problem that has deep roots in the social formation of the United
States since the 1960s. I think your open-ended conception of prison
abolition also allows for a more comprehensive understanding of the
prison-industrial complex as a set of institutional and political
relationships that extend well beyond the walls of the prison proper. So
i n a sense, prison abolition is itself a broader critique of society.
This brings me to the next question: What are the most crucial
distinctions between the political commitments and agendas of prison
reformists and those of prison abolitionists?
Angela: The seemingly unbreakable link between prison reform and
prison development -- referred to by Foucault in his analysis of prison
history -- has created a situation in which progress in prison reform
has tended to render the prison more impermeable to change and has
resulted in bigger, and what are considered "better," prisons.
The most difficult question for advocates of prison abolition is how to
establish a balance between reforms that are clearly necessary to
safeguard the lives of prisoners and those strategies designed to
promote the eventual abolition of prisons as the dominant mode of
punishment. In other words, I do not think that there is a strict
dividing line between reform and abolition. For example, it would be
utterly absurd for a radical prison activist to refuse to support the
demand for better health care inside Valley State, California's
largest women's prison, under the pretext that such reforms would
make the prison a more viable institution. Demands for improved health
care, inclu ding protection from sexual abuse and challenges to the
myriad ways in which prisons violate prisoners' human rights, can
be integrated into an abolitionist context that elaborates specific
decarceration strategies and helps to develop a popular discourse on the
need to shift resources from punishment to education, housing, health
care, and other public resources and services.
Dylan: Speaking of developing a popular discourse, the Critical
Resistance gathering in September 1998 seemed to pull together an
incredibly wide array of prison activists -- cultural workers, prisoner
support and legal advocates, former prisoners, radical teachers, all
kinds of researchers, progressive policy scholars and criminologists,
and many others. Although you were quite clear in the conference's
opening plenary session that the purpose of Critical Resistance was to
encourage people to imagine radical strategies for a sustained prison
abolition campaign, it was clear to me that only a few people took this
dimension of the conference seriously. That is, it seemed convenient for
people to rejoice at the unprecedented level of participation in this
presumably "radical" prison activist gathering, but the level
of analysis and political discussion generally failed to embrace the
creative challenge of formulating new ways to link existing activism to
a larger abolitionist agenda. People were generally more interested in
developing an analysis of the prison-industrial complex that
incorporated the local work that they were involved in, which I think is
an important practical connection to make. At the same time, I think
there is an inherent danger in conflating militant reform and human
rights strategies with the underlying logic of anti-prison radicalism,
which conceives of the ultimate eradication of the prison as a site of
state violence and social repression. What is required, at least in
part, is a new vernacular that enables this kind of political dream. How
does prison abolition necessitate new political language, teachings, and
organizing strategies? How could these strategies help to educate and
organize people inside and outside the prison for abolition?
Angela: In order to imagine a world without prisons -- or at least
a social landscape no longer dominated by the prison -- a new popular
vocabulary will have to replace the current language, which articulates
crime and punishment in such a way that we cannot think about a society
without crime except as a society in which all the criminals are
imprisoned. Thus, one of the first challenges is to be able to talk
about the many ways in which punishment is linked to poverty, racism,
sexism, homophobia, and other modes of dominance. In the university, the
emergence of the interdisciplinary field of prison studies can help to
trouble the prevailing criminology discourses that shape public policy
as well as popular ideas about the permanence of prisons. At the high
school level, new curricula can also be developed that encourage
critical thinking about the role of punishment. Community organizations
can also play a role in urging people to link their demands for better
schools, for example, to a reduction of prison spending.
Dylan: Your last comment suggests that we need to rupture the
ideological structures embodied by the rise of the prison-industrial
complex. How does prison abolition force us to rethink common
assumptions about jurisprudence, in particular "criminal
justice?"
Angela: Since the invention of the prison as punishment in Western
society during the late 1700s, criminal justice systems have so
thoroughly depended on imprisonment that we have lost the ability to
imagine other ways to solve the problem of "crime." One of the
interesting contributions of prison abolitionists has been to propose
other paradigms of punishment or to suggest that we need to extricate
ourselves from the assumption that punishment must be a necessary
response to all violations of the law. Reconciliatory or restorative
justice, for example, is presented by some abolitionists as an approach
that has proved successful in non-Western societies -- Native American
societies, for example -- and that can be tailored for use in urban
contexts in cases that involve property and other offenses. The
underlying idea is that in many cases, the reconciliation of offender
and victim (including monetary compensation to the victim) is a much
more progressive vision of justice than the social exile of the offender
. This is only one example -- the point is that we will not be free to
imagine other ways of addressing crime as long as we see the prison as a
permanent fixture for dealing with all or most violations of the law.
ANGELA Y. DAVIS teaches in the History of Consciousness program at
the University of California (215 Qakes College, Santa Cruz, CA 95060),
and has been actively involved in prison-related campaigns since the
events that led to her own incarceration in 1970. DYLAN RODRIGUEZ is
currently completing his doctoral dissertation on radical U.S. prison
intellectuals in the Department of Ethnic Studies at the University of
California, Berkeley (e-mail: dylan1@uclink4.berkeley.edu). He is a
member of the Critical Resistance organizing committee.