Researching at the community-university borderlands: Using public science to study policing in the South Bronx

This article is a case study of the Morris Justice Project (MJP), a participatory action research (PAR) study in a South Bronx neighborhood of New York City (NYC) designed to understand residents’ experiences with and attitudes towards the New York Police Department (NYPD). An illustration of public...

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Main Authors: Brett G. Stoudt, María Elena Torre, Paul Bartley, Evan Bissell, Fawn Bracy, Hillary Caldwell, Lauren Dewey, Anthony Downs, Cory Greene, Jan Haldipur, Scott Lizama, Prakriti Hassan, Einat Manoff, Nadine Sheppard, Jacqueline Yates
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 2019-05-01
Series:Education Policy Analysis Archives
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/2623
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spelling doaj-8dacad2657304164b666cc096d3bc0322020-11-25T03:37:50ZengArizona State UniversityEducation Policy Analysis Archives1068-23412019-05-0127010.14507/epaa.27.26231919Researching at the community-university borderlands: Using public science to study policing in the South BronxBrett G. Stoudt0María Elena Torre1Paul Bartley2Evan Bissell3Fawn Bracy4Hillary Caldwell5Lauren Dewey6Anthony Downs7Cory Greene8Jan Haldipur9Scott Lizama10Prakriti Hassan11Einat Manoff12Nadine Sheppard13Jacqueline Yates14John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNYGraduate Center, CUNYGraduate Center, CUNYUniversity of California, BerkeleyGraduate Center, CUNYGraduate Center, CUNYUniversity of VermontGraduate Center, CUNYGraduate Center, CUNYCalifornia State University Long BranchGraduate Center, CUNYGraduate Center, CUNYGraduate Center, CUNYGraduate Center, CUNYGraduate Center, CUNYThis article is a case study of the Morris Justice Project (MJP), a participatory action research (PAR) study in a South Bronx neighborhood of New York City (NYC) designed to understand residents’ experiences with and attitudes towards the New York Police Department (NYPD). An illustration of public science, the research was conducted in solidarity with an emerging police reform movement and in response to an ongoing and particularly aggressive set of policing policies that most heavily impacts poor communities and communities of color.  The case study describes a set of ongoing participatory, research-action, “sidewalk science” strategies, developed in 42 square blocks of the South Bronx, designed to better understand and challenge the ongoing structural violence of the carceral state. Collaboratively written with members of the Morris Justice collective, we tell our story across three sections that outline the genesis of the project, describe our major commitments, and offers PAR and public science as a possible “intervention” in traditional university practice.https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/2623participatory action researchpolicingstructural violencegrassroots activismpublic science
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brett G. Stoudt
María Elena Torre
Paul Bartley
Evan Bissell
Fawn Bracy
Hillary Caldwell
Lauren Dewey
Anthony Downs
Cory Greene
Jan Haldipur
Scott Lizama
Prakriti Hassan
Einat Manoff
Nadine Sheppard
Jacqueline Yates
spellingShingle Brett G. Stoudt
María Elena Torre
Paul Bartley
Evan Bissell
Fawn Bracy
Hillary Caldwell
Lauren Dewey
Anthony Downs
Cory Greene
Jan Haldipur
Scott Lizama
Prakriti Hassan
Einat Manoff
Nadine Sheppard
Jacqueline Yates
Researching at the community-university borderlands: Using public science to study policing in the South Bronx
Education Policy Analysis Archives
participatory action research
policing
structural violence
grassroots activism
public science
author_facet Brett G. Stoudt
María Elena Torre
Paul Bartley
Evan Bissell
Fawn Bracy
Hillary Caldwell
Lauren Dewey
Anthony Downs
Cory Greene
Jan Haldipur
Scott Lizama
Prakriti Hassan
Einat Manoff
Nadine Sheppard
Jacqueline Yates
author_sort Brett G. Stoudt
title Researching at the community-university borderlands: Using public science to study policing in the South Bronx
title_short Researching at the community-university borderlands: Using public science to study policing in the South Bronx
title_full Researching at the community-university borderlands: Using public science to study policing in the South Bronx
title_fullStr Researching at the community-university borderlands: Using public science to study policing in the South Bronx
title_full_unstemmed Researching at the community-university borderlands: Using public science to study policing in the South Bronx
title_sort researching at the community-university borderlands: using public science to study policing in the south bronx
publisher Arizona State University
series Education Policy Analysis Archives
issn 1068-2341
publishDate 2019-05-01
description This article is a case study of the Morris Justice Project (MJP), a participatory action research (PAR) study in a South Bronx neighborhood of New York City (NYC) designed to understand residents’ experiences with and attitudes towards the New York Police Department (NYPD). An illustration of public science, the research was conducted in solidarity with an emerging police reform movement and in response to an ongoing and particularly aggressive set of policing policies that most heavily impacts poor communities and communities of color.  The case study describes a set of ongoing participatory, research-action, “sidewalk science” strategies, developed in 42 square blocks of the South Bronx, designed to better understand and challenge the ongoing structural violence of the carceral state. Collaboratively written with members of the Morris Justice collective, we tell our story across three sections that outline the genesis of the project, describe our major commitments, and offers PAR and public science as a possible “intervention” in traditional university practice.
topic participatory action research
policing
structural violence
grassroots activism
public science
url https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/2623
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