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Joshua Clark Davis, "Police Against the Movement: The Sabotage of the Civil Rights Struggle and the Activists Who Fought Back" (Princeton UP, 2025)

Oct 28, 2025
Joshua Clark Davis, an Associate Professor of U.S. History at the University of Baltimore, dives into the hidden battles between civil rights activists and local police forces in his new book. He reveals how groups like CORE and SNCC confronted police abuses through direct actions, challenging the narrative that they endured violence passively. Davis discusses the insidious tactics of local red squads, the personal stories of activists facing severe repression, and how these historical injustices resonate in today's climate of protest.
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INSIGHT

Movement Actively Fought Police Power

  • Davis found the civil rights movement actively contested police violence, not just endured it.
  • CORE and SNCC staged precinct sit-ins, pickets, and street blockades to confront police malpractice.
INSIGHT

Police Violence Beyond Physical Harm

  • Davis expands the notion of police violence beyond beatings to include surveillance, infiltration, and legal harassment.
  • He uses "slow violence" and "political policing" to capture long-term harms that crippled organizers.
ANECDOTE

CORE's Early National Campaigns

  • CORE organized nationwide protests against municipal police beginning in 1963 after Birmingham.
  • CORE chapters picketed precincts, staged sit-ins, and pushed the idea that police malpractice was central to U.S. racism.
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