• Produktbild: We Grow the World Together
  • Produktbild: We Grow the World Together

We Grow the World Together Parenting Toward Abolition

24,99 €

inkl. gesetzl. MwSt., Versandkostenfrei


Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

19.11.2024

Abbildungen

B&W illustrations

Herausgeber

Maya Schenwar + weitere

Verlag

Ingram Publishers Services

Seitenzahl

306

Maße (L/B/H)

21,4/13,7/2 cm

Gewicht

392 g

Sprache

Englisch

EAN

9798888902554

Beschreibung

Portrait

Maya Schenwaris director of the Truthout Center for Grassroots Journalism andboard president atTruthout. She is the coauthor (with Victoria Law) ofPrison by AnyOther Name: The Harmful Consequences ofPopular Reformsand the author ofLockedDown, Locked Out: Why Prison Doesn't Workand How We Can Do Better. Maya is also thecoeditor (with Joe Macare and Alana YuLan Price) ofWho Do You Serve, Who DoYou Protect? Police Violence and Resistance inthe United States, and has written forThe New York Times,The Guardian,TheNation, and numerous other publications. Maya is a cofounder of the Chicago Community Bond Fund and organizes with the Love & Protect collective.She lives in Chicago with her partner, child, and abolitionist cat.

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

19.11.2024

Abbildungen

B&W illustrations

Herausgeber

Verlag

Ingram Publishers Services

Seitenzahl

306

Maße (L/B/H)

21,4/13,7/2 cm

Gewicht

392 g

Sprache

Englisch

EAN

9798888902554

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: We Grow the World Together
  • Produktbild: We Grow the World Together
  • Foreword 
    By Beth Richie
    Introduction: From Prisons to the Playground, Caregiving and Abolition Intertwine
    By Maya Schenwar
    Part 1: Lessons From Our Kids, Lessons From Our Parents
    I Want to Start School So I Can Learn to Write Letters to My Dad in Prison
    By EJ, 6 years old
    The Work of Making Life: Four Vignettes on Abolitionist Caregiving in Practice
    By Harsha Walia
    Parenting Toward Abolition From Inside Prison: A Letter to My Daughter
    By Erika Ray
    “An Imagination Party”: How My Toddler Fuels My Abolitionist Vision
    By Maya Schenwar
    Walking Side by Side With My Mother: A Reflection on Abolition and Accountability 
    By Jnana
    “It Opened My Heart”: Lessons From Being Parented by an Abolitionist
    By Paul LaCombe, interviewed by Kim Wilson
    Saying Goodbye to My Grandmother From Prison
    By Antoniese Gant
    A Mother's Neverending Pain From Incarceration: The Ongoing Fight to Restore Dignity
    By D’Marria Monday
    Interdependence at the End of the World: Abolitionist Parenting Beyond Happiness 
    By Sarah Tyson
    Part 2: Parents and Caregivers in Movement
    The Legacy of Black Mothers’ Radical Resistance of Care
    By Dorothy Roberts
    Mama Solidarity and the Founding of Moms United Against Violence and Incarceration
    By Holly Krig
    Free Gilbert Jones: The Early Political Geography of Mothers ROC
    By Ruth Wilson Gilmore
    Learning From Claudia Jones: Mobilizing Parents Toward Liberatory Political Consciousness in the Face of a Right-Wing “Parents’ Movement”
    By Kaitlin Noss
    Parental Tools for Abolition: Some Dad Shit
    By Dylan Rodríguez
    Out of Many, One: Our Adventures in Parenting Toward Freedom
    By Bill Ayers and Bernardine Dohrn
    Part 3: Caregiving Dreams Beyond Normative Family Structures
    Queer Family as an Intervention on Police Violence: Abolition and the Beauty of Choosing our Loved Ones
    by Shira Hassan, interviewed by Maya Schenwar
    Empire and Colonization Operate Through Family. How Do We Disrupt Them in Our Homes?
    By Stacey Austin and Nadine Naber
    Building an Abolitionist World Includes Supporting Caregivers. Here are 6 Concrete Ways to Do That.
    By Victoria Law
    He Calls Me Zaza: A Nonbinary Roadmap to Liberation
    By Keisa Reynolds
    Shelter and Shower Toward Abolition: A Reflection on Collective Care, Reproductive Justice and Educational Justice
    By Anya Tanyavutti
    Part 4: Practicing Abolitionist Caregiving
    Using Children’s Books as a Tool for Abolition
    By Mariame Kaba, interviewed by Maya Schenwar
    In Order to Talk to My Child About War and Prisons, I Must Talk to Him About Resistance
    By Ryann Croken
    Kids Are Wondering… What Is Abolition?
    by the PDX Childcare Collective
    Passing On: Practicing Restorative Justice at Home
    By Jennifer Viets
    How Do We Survive—and Parent—With Our Love Intact?
    By adrienne maree brown and Autumn Brown
    Confronting Copaganda: How to Challenge Cartoon Cops and Officer Friendly
    Rania El Mugammar
    We Love Ourselves, Too: Stewarding Possibilities Together 
    By Alejandro Villalpando and Susana Victoria Parras
    Conclusion: Continuing to Learn and Grow
    By Kim Wilson