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Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
The number of bullets used to kill Jayland Walker have sparked an outcry, but police kill one Black person every day in this country.
Pan-African Community Action
Once we are able to secure Community Control over Police and ensure that entire communities are empowered to exercise such control, we will be free
Glen Ford, BAR Executive Editor
Community control puts us on the path to both defunding and abolishing the police – so why are many Black Lives Matter chapters withholding s
Glen Ford, BAR Executive Editor
The Black movement will be asphyxiated by the ubiquitous fingers of the Democratic Party if it does not build independent nexuses of people’s power
Glen Ford, BAR Executive Editor
Building People’s Power is the vital arena of struggle under late stage capitalism, when the “system” is not only objectively failing, but the peop
Glen Ford, BAR Executive Editor
Community control of the police means empowering the people to shape and oversee the mechanisms of their own security and end forever the armed occ
Glen Ford, BAR Executive Editor
Abolition of the police begins with community control, in which community representatives not only hire, fire and oversee the cops, but decide the
Glen Ford, BAR Executive Editor
Having not yet won real power over the police, this is no time for a lull or a truce -- it’s time to sharpen our political instruments and deepen t
Max Rameau and Netfa Freeman
Defunding the police might end the armed and uniformed force as we know it, but the ruling class will then hire mercenaries to protect their wealth
Howie Hawkins
This policy paper makes the case for reviving the Black Panther Party program for community control of the police.
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- The EditorsBlack Agenda Report will return with our next issue on Wednesday, September 10. Please watch our new video, "Inequality in Kenya: View From Kibera," produced in collaboration with the North-South…
- Glen Ford, BAR Executive EditorBlack Agenda Report's late Executive Editor, Glen Ford, gave this interview a decade after Hurricane Katrina to explore how the narrative of "starting over" is being used to whitewash the forced…
- Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior ColumnistTwenty years ago, the world witnessed more than the suffering of hurricane Katrina's victims. The United States was exposed as a failed state controlled by the cruelties of racialized capitalism.
- Editors, The Black Agenda Review“It’s not like New Orleans was caught off guard. This could have been prevented.”