Policing Los Angeles: Race, Resistance, and the Rise of the LAPD

Policing Los Angeles: Race, Resistance, and the Rise of the LAPD

by Max Felker-Kantor
Policing Los Angeles: Race, Resistance, and the Rise of the LAPD

Policing Los Angeles: Race, Resistance, and the Rise of the LAPD

by Max Felker-Kantor

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Overview

When the Los Angeles neighborhood of Watts erupted in violent protest in August 1965, the uprising drew strength from decades of pent-up frustration with employment discrimination, residential segregation, and poverty. But the more immediate grievance was anger at the racist and abusive practices of the Los Angeles Police Department. Yet in the decades after Watts, the LAPD resisted all but the most limited demands for reform made by activists and residents of color, instead intensifying its power.

In Policing Los Angeles, Max Felker-Kantor narrates the dynamic history of policing, anti–police abuse movements, race, and politics in Los Angeles from the 1965 Watts uprising to the 1992 Los Angeles rebellion. Using the explosions of two large-scale uprisings in Los Angeles as bookends, Felker-Kantor highlights the racism at the heart of the city's expansive police power through a range of previously unused and rare archival sources. His book is a gripping and timely account of the transformation in police power, the convergence of interests in support of law and order policies, and African American and Mexican American resistance to police violence after the Watts uprising.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781469659183
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Publication date: 02/01/2020
Series: Justice, Power, and Politics
Pages: 392
Sales rank: 929,184
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Max Felker-Kantor is associate professor of history at Ball State University.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

A richly researched study, this book should be read by anyone hoping to understand the intensity of policing in Los Angeles since the 1965 Watts Rebellion. Using new archival finds, it is a page-turning chronicle of race, capitalism, and state violence in the heart of the city.—Kelly Lytle Hernandez, author of City of Inmates: Conquest, Rebellion, and the Rise of Human Caging in Los Angeles



A deft combination of political and social history, Policing Los Angeles adds rich depth to the emerging histories of the expanding carceral state in the second half of the twentieth century. With the LAPD as subject, this book is at once a local and a national story of urgent significance.—Dan Berger, University of Washington Bothell



Policing Los Angeles vividly captures—better than any other book on the market—both the rise of modern police power and the emergence of a social movement strong enough to challenge it.—Christopher Agee, University of Colorado Denver

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