Resources

Links and resources that are helpful:

Local

  • Police Obsolescence Project
    http://policeop.blogspot.com/
    "Working toward a world without police. Some of the efforts of this Santa Cruz, California workgroup include CopWatch, know your rights, police accountability, alternatives to calling the police, and education about police, courts, and jails."
  • Bad Cop Santa Cruz
    http://badcopsc.blogspot.com/
    "We seek to document the abuse of authority and highlight the double standard that some grant to those with badges. By documenting police actions... we encourage transparency and hold police accountable. If you are familiar with CopWatch projects, this is a way of documenting what we see when we are watching"

Resource Guides

  • for a safer world
    http://zinelibrary.info/files/for_a_safer_world.pdf
    "a guide to local groups, online resources, zines, books and films on trauma, survivor support, communication, mental health, community accountablility, anti-sexism, addiction, and conflict mediation."

Alternatives to Police

  • Feeling for the Edge of your Imagination: finding ways not to call the police
    http://imaginealternatives.tumblr.com/
    "I, and many people I know, want to see a world without prisons, we want the whole industry of keeping people in cages (the Prison Industrial Complex) abolished, we want no more police.* We want a world where responses to harm are community-based, transformative and actually create safety. Where that safety comes from strengthening relations of community, where interpersonal violence dissolves along with the structural violence that facilitates it."
  • Rose City Copwatch - Alternatives to Police
    https://rosecitycopwatch.wordpress.com/alternatives-to-police/
    "For Rose City Copwtch, our long-term vision is a world without police, a world in which communities function and thrive without the intervention of the heavy and often deadly hand of the State.  But it can be difficult to imagine a cop-free world.  Who would respond to emergencies?  What would we do about crime?  The existing police, prison and court systems have presented themselves to the public as the only possible answers.  As police abolitionists, we need to find other solutions.  If we can create and support liberatory alternatives to the police, we can meet the community's basic needs for dealing with harm, disrupt the idea that the work of the police is legitimate, and help people imagine a world without police."

Accountability

  • As If They Were Human:  A Different Take on Perpetrator Accountability
    http://zinelibrary.info/files/augusta-scott comp zine- imposed.pdf
    "The title of this zine is a reference to how I feel perpetrators should be treated: as if they were human. Because they are human. The mainstream portrays perpetrators as hopeless cases, who care about nothing in life other than power and control. While it is certainly clear that those who sexually assault, abuse, or rape others do care quite a bit about power and control, it is disingenuous to declare that those are the only things they care about. As with all humans, humans who are also perpetrators have many desires and wishes for their lives."

Re-envisioning Cities

  • City Repair Project - Portland, OR
    http://cityrepair.org
    "City Repair was formed in Portland, Oregon in 1996 by citizen activists who wanted a more community-oriented and ecologically sustainable society. Born out of a successful grassroots neighborhood initiative that converted a residential street intersection into a neighborhood public square, City Repair began its work with the idea that localization (of culture, of economy, of decision-making) is a necessary foundation of sustainability. By reclaiming urban spaces to create community-oriented places, we plant the seeds for greater neighborhood communication, empower our communities and nurture our local culture."
  • Dignity Village - Portland, OR
    https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Dignity_Village
    "In the days before Christmas of 2000, a group of homeless people in Portland succeeded in establishing a tent city which garnered a great deal of both opposition and support, and quickly evolved from a group of self-described "outsiders" who practiced civil disobedience, to a self-regulating, city-recognized "campground" as defined by Portland city code. Dignity Village got its start as a collection of tents and campers "squatting" illegally on unused public land near Downtown Portland."

Communication & Conflict

  • Non-Violent Communication Santa Cruz
    http://www.nvcsantacruz.org
    "Nonviolent Communication (NVC) is a way of communicating that strengthens our ability to stay in touch with our humanity and get our needs met, even under difficult circumstances. Instead of habitual responses, our words become conscious responses based on a clear awareness of what we are observing, feeling, and wanting. We are led to express ourselves with honesty and clarity, while paying respectful and empathic attention to others."
  • Restorative Resources Santa Cruz
    http://www.nvcsantacruz.org/rr
    "Restorative Resources Santa Cruz (RRSC) supports groups to function at their highest levels by integration of practices that build trust and teamwork and resolution of conflicts in ways that strengthen the group. In a world that often resorts to resentment, blame, and reprimands, Restorative Resources offers non-punitive processes to create environments where trust and understanding are valued and fostered."