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1. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 3 > Issue: 1
Joy James Acknowledgments
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articles
2. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 3 > Issue: 1
Joy A. James Introduction
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3. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 3 > Issue: 1
Robert Perkinson Angola and the Agony of Prison Reform
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With 5,000 convicts, most of them lifers, working soy, corn, and cotton crops, Angola’s “penal slavery” system today eerily recalls Louisiana’s past investment in the peculiar institution. Present-day form of discipline (chain gangs and striped uniforms) also indicate that dehumanization and popular vengeance are the selling points of a new punishment order. Using “America’s worst prison” as a case study, the author charts an archeology of the penal system in the U.S. South, arguing that prison revolts, and particularly the heelslinger revolution of 1951, have historically ushered in significant if short-lived improvements in the penal system, and that activists in the free world must heed them in their efforts to bring about prison reform.
4. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 3 > Issue: 1
Nan Boyd Policing Queers: San Francisco’s History of Repression and Resistance
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Ever since it was annexed from northern Mexico in 1848, San Francisco has catered to tourists attracted to its good year-round weather, natural splendor, as well as its licentious entertainment industry and, since the 1950s, the buoyancy of its lesbian and gay community. The author looks at the growth and vibrancy of alternative lifestyles in San Francisco, arguing that the visibility of the queer community there is not the result of general tolerance in the Western outpost but, paradoxically, the outcome of a struggle between the lesbian, gay, and transgendered residents of the city and the repressive local, state, and federal agencies whose harassment of the alternative communities, culminating in the 1930s and 1940s in frequent bar-raids, arrests, and the “war on vice,” brought about the queer community’s politicization and grovving militancy.
5. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 3 > Issue: 1
Jan Susler Puerto Rican Political Prisoners
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Using analysis and anecdote, the author examines fifteen Puerto Rican political prisoners in the U.S. prison system and the disproportionate sentences for their actions to end U.S. colonial control over Puerto Rico. These prisoners, lacking prior felony convictions, received punitive, restrictive treatment by the U.S. justice system - despite monitoring by Amnesty International and lawsuits by attorneys. The manufacturing of sting operations to entrap prisoners in illegal activities; their isolation from families; the infliction of physical abuse and psychological torture; and the withholding of medical care, are strategically applied by U.S. courts and prisons to force the renunciation of their political beliefs.
6. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 3 > Issue: 1
Mumia Abu-Jamal A Life Lived, Deliberately: June 11, 1999 Evergreen State College Commencement Address
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In this address, Mumia Abu-Jamal argues that a sustained commitment to revolutionary activity is no accident, that it depends upon an initial and irrevocable choice to change intolerable social conditions. The individual who makes such a choice, Abu-Jamal recognizes, is often aware of the suffering that his or her decision may entail. Citing the deliberately led lives of several revolutionaries, including Huey Newton, John Brown, and Ramona Africa, the author hopes that young people will draw inspiration from these examples by understanding the importance and continued possibility of such a choice.
7. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 3 > Issue: 1
Sabrina Hodges, Heather Larrabee Mumia Abu-Jamal: A Call for Economic Militancy
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The authors provide a concise analysis of the changing political economy of race, incarceration, political imprisonment, and execution in the U.S. criminal justice system. The article goes on to describe the circumstances surrounding the arrest, conviction, and impending execution of the black militant, Mumia Abu-Jamal. From here the discussion turns to an examination of the political efficacy of various boycott strategies and tactics, and, in closing, begins to outline a specific plan of action aimed at preventing Abu-Jamal’s execution.
8. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 3 > Issue: 1
Ward Churchill The New Face of Liberation: Indigenous Rebellion, State Repression and the Reality of the Fourth World
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Fascist, liberal democratic, or Marxist states are premised upon the violation of indigenous rights. If the transformation of U.S. society emerges where racism, sexism, ageism, militarism, classism, and corporatism are eradicated - what happens, the author asks, to the material and political rights of native peoples? Interrogating the objectives of progressive methodology and practice, which promotes liberatory rhetoric, but replicates a global colonialist system, the author calls for a nonindustrialized Fourth World. Debunking the three worlds paradigm establishes working models of decolonization,allowing the foundation of ecologically balanced socioeconomic and political organization.
9. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 3 > Issue: 1
Norberto Valdez “Low Intensity Conflict” for Whom?: U.S. Policy and Chiapas, Mexico
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Mexico faces a crisis of national sovereignty and independence as it struggles to establish a democracy amidst integration into the world market system and internal demands for social justice. U.S. involvement in Mexican affairs, providing military training and equipment for government troops, contributes to a state-sponsored war against civilians, namely indigenous groups and the middle and lower classes devastated by NAFTA. While resistance movements in Chiapas respond to capitalist practices and repression, Valdez argues the Mexican government minimizes them to displace its indigenousgroups and facilitate their silent annihilation. U.S. policy, the Mexican state, indigenous issues, and free trade are interconnected with Mexico’s larger society.
10. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 3 > Issue: 1
Statement from J. Everet Green, Organizer of the RPA Anti-Death Penalty Project
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11. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 3 > Issue: 1
Phillip Barron Gender Discrimination in the U.S. Death Penalty System
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Although the demographics on male versus female death-row prisoners suggest that males are criminal justice system’s primary targets, the author argues that the system still discriminates against women. Vtilizing postmodern scholarship, he argues that female prisoners are punished primarily for violating dominant norms of gender correctness.
review essays
12. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 3 > Issue: 1
B. Anthony Bogues Political Memory and the Radical Caribbean Intellectual Tradition: Rupert Lewis’s Walter Rodney’s Intellectual and Political Thought
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13. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 3 > Issue: 1
Michael Principe Dimensions of a Revolutionary Life: Jon Lee Anderson’s Che Guevara: A Revolutionary Life
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contents
14. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 3 > Issue: 1
Contributors
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