San Francisco State University.
Law Soc Rev. 2010;44(3-4):769-804. doi: 10.1111/j.1540-5893.2010.00422.x.
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the city of Seattle received federal Department of Housing and Urban Development “Model cities” funds to address issues of racial disenfranchisement in the city. Premised under the “Great Society” ethos, Model cities sought to remedy the strained relationship between local governments and disenfranchised urban communities. Though police-community relations were not initially slated as an area of concern in the city's grant application, residents of the designated “model neighborhood” pressed for the formation of a law and justice task force to address the issue. This article examines the process and outcome of the two law-and-justice projects proposed by residents of the designated “model neighborhood”: the Consumer Protection program and the Community Service Officer project. Drawing on the work of legal geographies scholars, I argue that the failure of each of these efforts to achieve residents' intentions stems from the geographical imagination of urban problems. Like law-and-order projects today, the geographical imagination of the model neighborhood produced a discourse of exceptionality that subjected residents to extraordinary state interventions. The Model cities project thus provides an example of a “history of the present” of mass incarceration in which the geographical imagination of crime helps facilitate the re-creation of a racialized power structure.
20 世纪 60 年代末和 70 年代初,西雅图市获得了联邦住房和城市发展部的“模范城市”基金,以解决该市的种族剥夺问题。模范城市计划以“伟大社会”的精神为前提,旨在改善地方政府与被剥夺权利的城市社区之间的紧张关系。尽管在该市的拨款申请中,警察与社区的关系最初并不是一个关注的领域,但指定的“模范社区”的居民强烈要求成立一个法律和司法工作队来解决这个问题。本文考察了指定“模范社区”居民提出的两项法律和司法项目的过程和结果:消费者保护计划和社区服务官员项目。本文借鉴了法律地理学学者的工作,认为这些努力都没有实现居民的意图,这源于对城市问题的地理想象。与今天的法律与秩序项目一样,模范社区的地理想象产生了一种特殊性话语,使居民受到国家的特别干预。模范城市项目因此提供了一个大规模监禁的“当下历史”的例子,其中犯罪的地理想象有助于促进重新建立一个种族化的权力结构。