Angela Davis in Aotearoa

by frog

those of us lucky enough to hear Prof. Angela Davis in Auckland on Monday night or Wellington last night are likely to still be buzzing from it – Frog certainly is.

The turnout itself was inspiring (possibly not so inspiring if you were one of the almost 200 people turned away from her Wgtn lecture!). The fact that so many people were so keen to hear this amazing thinker that they’d turn up more than an hour before on a helluva wintery wellington evening gave one hope for the future.

Amongst the lucky select few who actually made it into the main lecture theatre to hear Prof Davis in the flesh was our Nandor (though she very graciously popped in to address us lesser souls in the overflow room, and apparently spoke briefly to some of the unlucky ones who were still optimistically queueing the foyer).

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Here’s his thoughts on the evening:

Went to see Angela Davis speak this evening. I’ve been looking forward to it since I found out that she was coming to Aotearoa to speak. So was half of Wellington it seemed because the lecture theatre in Rutherford House was full and they has to turn some 200 people away. They had an overflow room where her speech was broadcast live and she took the time before she spoke to go and have a word with those who missed out.

Which I guess was the first indication of a great generosity of spirit that clearly came through her talk. A woman who faced capital charges in the USA three times for her work for justice, a woman that (then Governor) Ronald Reagan vowed would never teach in a university in California again, now a professor at the University of California Santa Cruz. But it wasn’t just her piercing intellect and profound analysis, but also her warm humanity that really shone through.

She focussed first and, in summing up, last, on the strength of ordinary people, when committed and organised, to change the world for the better. She spoke of the enormous international solidarity of progressive people that has been demonstrated at times, including in campaigning against her unfair detention and trial in the 60’s, and asked why anyone would think it is not possible to display that again, and in a consistent way. She spoke of how by building community, we can take back our world. And she highlighted her point by talking about a subject that has been the core of her work for the past four decades – the abolition of prisons.

I won’t try to reproduce her analysis – that would need considerably more time and care than this quick post would allow. What I will say is that she presented a cogent, intelligent and penetrating analysis of the functions of prisons in western democracies and made a strong case for their abolition.

She pointed out a number of facts around the massive growth in the prison population over that past three or so decades, connected to the increased social dislocation, alienation and economic disparity of the period. She pointed out the structural racism inherent in the prison industrial complex, as evidenced by a visit to any prison in the western world. She also pointed out that women are the fastest growing section of the prison population.

Prisons, she said, are a dumping ground for people, as a means of control and maintenance of economic domination and conceptually, as a way of disposing of the unacceptable face of capitalist society – the other side of the affluent coin. She pointed out the tendency to create simple and false stereotypes about who is in prison and the way this is used to deny real debate about what purposes prisons serve.

She highlighted the constant policy cycle of ‘tough prisons, rehabilitative prisons, tough prisons, rehabilitative prisons’, a cycle which we are seeing in action right now in this country, and which ignores the more fundamental point that PRISONS DO NOT REHABILITATE. As both the Roper Report and Moana Jackson’s report into Maori and the Criminal Justice System clearly demonstrated, a different approach entirely is needed.

Most of her talk was totally relevant to this country, where the excessive demonising of prison inmates (think politicians language about ‘criminal scumbags’, ‘domestic terrorists’ etc etc) has an equally numbing effect on rational discourse. All in all, a great talk and refreshing to hear such a lucid and profound critique of the prison industrial complex.

Massive respect to those involved in getting her out here, and to all those would attended: a veritable who’s who of the activist and radical communities in Aotearoa.

Libertad

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Published in Economy, Work, & Welfare | Health & Wellbeing | Justice & Democracy | Society & Culture by frog on Wed, June 27th, 2007   

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