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- Title
VULNERABLE, NOT VOICELESS: OUTSIDER NARRATIVE IN ADVOCACY AGAINST DISCRIMINATORY POLICING.
- Authors
FUTRELL, NICOLE SMITH
- Abstract
The article discusses the role of outsider narrative theory in relation to legal advocacy against discriminatory policing in places such as New York, New York. Vulnerability and social inequities are mentioned, along with an anti-stop-and-frisk police technique movement. An American lawyer's role in understanding and promoting narrative in mobilization against aggressive policing is examined, as well as police-citizen relations and police-related legal cases such as Terry v. Ohio.
- Subjects
NEW York (N.Y.); NEW York (State); UNITED States; NARRATIVES -- Social aspects; POLICE; DISCRIMINATION in criminal justice administration; STOP &; frisk (Police method); VULNERABILITY (Psychology) -- Social aspects; EQUALITY &; society; EQUALITY; LAWYERS; TERRY v. Ohio
- Publication
North Carolina Law Review, 2015, Vol 93, Issue 5, p1597
- ISSN
0029-2524
- Publication type
Article