Dismantling the Criminal Justice Empire: A Feminisms Analysis of U.S. Law, State Violence, and Resistance in the Digital Age

Thesis advisor: C. Shawn . McGuffey === Thesis advisor: Zine . Magubane === This dissertation analyzes the impact of U.S. law on women of color at home and abroad, as well as the ways in which women of color respond to and resist U.S. law. In their resistance, they challenge the domestic failings...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Comley, Caliesha Lavonne
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Boston College 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:108636
id ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_108636
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1086362019-12-03T07:21:52Z Dismantling the Criminal Justice Empire: A Feminisms Analysis of U.S. Law, State Violence, and Resistance in the Digital Age Comley, Caliesha Lavonne Thesis advisor: C. Shawn . McGuffey Thesis advisor: Zine . Magubane Text thesis 2019 Boston College English electronic application/pdf This dissertation analyzes the impact of U.S. law on women of color at home and abroad, as well as the ways in which women of color respond to and resist U.S. law. In their resistance, they challenge the domestic failings of the U.S. criminal justice system as well as the systems which connect state violence internationally. The first article of this project explores the space of the sentencing hearing as a site for rhetorically reclaiming Black motherhood in the face of its pathologization. I use the case of Marissa Alexander to show how the defendant and her family resist the exclusionary politics of legal protection. The second article examines the relationship between police militarization and strategies of black digital resistance and theorizes Black Lives Matter as a cyborg feminist social movement that can serve as a base for a global, intersectional resistance against systems of state violence. The third article challenges the dominant narrative of liberal imperialism in the U.S. anti-human trafficking project which positions U.S. as sole capable leader in the fight against “modern-day slavery” and the liberation of poor women of color in the global South and East. Though each article employs a slightly different framework, my dissertation is grounded in a qualitative sociological approach to content analysis and is informed by interdisciplinary concepts from legal studies and critical rhetorical approaches. My research centers multiple feminisms, including Critical Race Feminism, cyborg feminism, and postcolonial legal feminism, and incorporates important scholarship on technology and social movements. In this project, I demonstrate affinity between feminist theoretical approaches. More broadly, I contribute to bodies of research that challenge the notion that institutions such as the criminal justice system, digital spaces, and humanitarian aid are designed to protect and provide remedies for victims of domestic and state sponsored violence. I propose framework of feminisms in dialogue for both analyzing and resisting the hegemony of U.S. law which legitimizes and reproduces interlocking systems of racism, sexism, and imperialism. Criminal Justice Feminisms Qualitative Analysis Race Class Gender Sociology of Law Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2019. Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Discipline: Sociology. http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:108636
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Criminal Justice
Feminisms
Qualitative Analysis
Race
Class
Gender
Sociology of Law
spellingShingle Criminal Justice
Feminisms
Qualitative Analysis
Race
Class
Gender
Sociology of Law
Comley, Caliesha Lavonne
Dismantling the Criminal Justice Empire: A Feminisms Analysis of U.S. Law, State Violence, and Resistance in the Digital Age
description Thesis advisor: C. Shawn . McGuffey === Thesis advisor: Zine . Magubane === This dissertation analyzes the impact of U.S. law on women of color at home and abroad, as well as the ways in which women of color respond to and resist U.S. law. In their resistance, they challenge the domestic failings of the U.S. criminal justice system as well as the systems which connect state violence internationally. The first article of this project explores the space of the sentencing hearing as a site for rhetorically reclaiming Black motherhood in the face of its pathologization. I use the case of Marissa Alexander to show how the defendant and her family resist the exclusionary politics of legal protection. The second article examines the relationship between police militarization and strategies of black digital resistance and theorizes Black Lives Matter as a cyborg feminist social movement that can serve as a base for a global, intersectional resistance against systems of state violence. The third article challenges the dominant narrative of liberal imperialism in the U.S. anti-human trafficking project which positions U.S. as sole capable leader in the fight against “modern-day slavery” and the liberation of poor women of color in the global South and East. Though each article employs a slightly different framework, my dissertation is grounded in a qualitative sociological approach to content analysis and is informed by interdisciplinary concepts from legal studies and critical rhetorical approaches. My research centers multiple feminisms, including Critical Race Feminism, cyborg feminism, and postcolonial legal feminism, and incorporates important scholarship on technology and social movements. In this project, I demonstrate affinity between feminist theoretical approaches. More broadly, I contribute to bodies of research that challenge the notion that institutions such as the criminal justice system, digital spaces, and humanitarian aid are designed to protect and provide remedies for victims of domestic and state sponsored violence. I propose framework of feminisms in dialogue for both analyzing and resisting the hegemony of U.S. law which legitimizes and reproduces interlocking systems of racism, sexism, and imperialism. === Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2019. === Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. === Discipline: Sociology.
author Comley, Caliesha Lavonne
author_facet Comley, Caliesha Lavonne
author_sort Comley, Caliesha Lavonne
title Dismantling the Criminal Justice Empire: A Feminisms Analysis of U.S. Law, State Violence, and Resistance in the Digital Age
title_short Dismantling the Criminal Justice Empire: A Feminisms Analysis of U.S. Law, State Violence, and Resistance in the Digital Age
title_full Dismantling the Criminal Justice Empire: A Feminisms Analysis of U.S. Law, State Violence, and Resistance in the Digital Age
title_fullStr Dismantling the Criminal Justice Empire: A Feminisms Analysis of U.S. Law, State Violence, and Resistance in the Digital Age
title_full_unstemmed Dismantling the Criminal Justice Empire: A Feminisms Analysis of U.S. Law, State Violence, and Resistance in the Digital Age
title_sort dismantling the criminal justice empire: a feminisms analysis of u.s. law, state violence, and resistance in the digital age
publisher Boston College
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:108636
work_keys_str_mv AT comleycalieshalavonne dismantlingthecriminaljusticeempireafeminismsanalysisofuslawstateviolenceandresistanceinthedigitalage
_version_ 1719301198203322368