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Prison Industrial Complex

Prison Industrial Complex (PIC) is “a massive multi-billion dollar industry that promotes the exponential expansion of prisons, jails, immigrant detention centers, and juvenile detention centers. The PIC is represented by corporations that profit from incarceration, politicians who target people of color so that they appear to be “tough on crime,” and the media that represents a slanted view of how crime looks in our communities. In order to survive, the PIC uses propaganda to convince the public how much we need prisons; uses public support to strengthen harmful law-and-order agendas such as the “War on Drugs” and the “War on Terrorism”; uses these agendas to justify imprisoning disenfranchised people of color, poor people, and people with disabilities; leverages the resulting increasing rate of incarceration for prison-related corporate investments (construction, maintenance, goods and services); pockets the profit; and uses profit to create more propaganda.

c/o Communities against rape and abuse (CARA)


Abolition

PIC abolition is a political vision with the goal of eliminating imprisonment, policing, and surveillance and creating lasting alternatives to punishment and imprisonment.

From where we are now, sometimes we can’t really imagine what abolition is going to look like. Abolition isn’t just about getting rid of buildings full of cages. It’s also about undoing the society we live in because the PIC both feeds on and maintains oppression and inequalities through punishment, violence, and controls millions of people. Because the PIC is not an isolated system, abolition is a broad strategy. An abolitionist vision means that we must build models today that can represent how we want to live in the future. It means developing practical strategies for taking small steps that move us toward making our dreams real and that lead us all to believe that things really could be different. It means living this vision in our daily lives. Abolition is both a practical organizing tool and a long-term goal.

c/o Critical Resistance

Carceral Feminism

Carceral Feminism is the reliance on police, prosecution, courts, prisons and other forms of carcerality (state survelliance of marginalized groups) in response to sexual violence.

Learn more here: Victoria Law’s “Against Carceral Feminism”


Criminalization

Criminalization is the social and political process by which society determines which actions or behaviors – and by who – will be punished by the state. At the most basic level, it involves passage and enforcement of criminal laws. While framed as neutral, decisions about what kinds of conduct to punish, how, and how much are very much a choice, guided by existing structures of economic and social inequality based on race, gender, sexuality, disability, and poverty, among others.

C/o Andrea Ritchie & Beth Richie “The Crisis of Criminalization


Criminal Punishment System

We call it the criminal punishment system instead of justice system because what this system does is not justice. justice is not punishment, it is not continued cycles of violence. there is no justice to be had in the PIC. what this system does do quite well is punish - it violently punishes those who have been criminalized. this system dehumanizes people and is not an even arbiter of right and wrong. Rather, it targets marginalized people – namely black and brown people, the poor, disabled people, queer and trans people – and criminalizes their behavior so as to uphold a certain social structure.