New Books in History

Caitlin Wiesner, "Between the Street and the State: Black Women’s Anti-Rape Activism Amid the War on Crime" (U Pennsylvania, 2025)

Dec 11, 2025
Caitlin Wiesner, an Assistant Professor of History, discusses her groundbreaking work on Black women's anti-rape activism during the war on crime. She reveals how Black organizers viewed police as a source of violence, rather than protection, and employed strategies of subversion and resistance. Wiesner highlights community-based care and the innovative approaches of activists like Lynn Moncrief and Nakenji Ture, showcasing their profound impact on both local and national movements. Her insights reflect a critical reassessment of feminist strategies against sexual violence.
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INSIGHT

Simultaneous Street And State Violence

  • Black anti-rape organizers navigated simultaneous interpersonal and state violence in their strategies.
  • They designed tactics that accounted for both police harm and community safety rather than choosing one over the other.
INSIGHT

Three-Tier Tactics Over Time

  • Black organizers used three tactics: subversion, diversion, and resistance to navigate federal crime-funding.
  • These tactics evolved as federal funding landscapes shifted from the 1970s through the 1990s.
ANECDOTE

Moncrief’s LEAA-Funded Subversion

  • Lynn Moncrief used LEAA funding but refused to prioritize police reporting for Black victims.
  • She focused on community education and self-defense and created a Third World Women's Caucus to center women of color.
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