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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, Assistant Professor of History at Mercy University, dives into her groundbreaking work on Black women's anti-rape activism. She explores the tension between feminist movements and policing, revealing how Black activists redirected state funds to community care. Wiesner highlights innovative strategies like the Chicago Sexual Assault Services Network and critiques of federal policies like VAWA, showing how these activists navigated violence to foster resilience. This rich conversation uncovers the profound impact of grassroots approaches to safety and justice.
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INSIGHT

Interpersonal And State Violence Are Linked

  • Black anti-rape organizers saw interpersonal violence and state violence as simultaneous and inseparable problems.
  • They developed strategies accounting for both street-level assaults and hostile law enforcement tactics.
INSIGHT

Oral Histories Reconnect Scattered Archives

  • Combining archives with oral histories revealed activists and organizations otherwise invisible in formal records.
  • National newsletters and interviews let Wiesner map a dispersed national network of Black anti-rape work.
INSIGHT

An Arsenal: Subversion, Diversion, Resistance

  • Wiesner groups tactics as subversion, diversion, and resistance across decades.
  • These categories show how activists adapted to changing federal funding and policing pressures.
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