Institute for Advanced Study Presents

Building an Archive for Police Reform

(In)Justice Series

Wed, Mar 19, 3:30 pm CT
In-person / Livestream
Free Event, Registration Requested

Captioning
Pastor Danny Givens addresses the crowd at a rally.

How can the lessons learned by organizers and activists today be made accessible for generations to come? Michelle Gross (Communities United Against Police Violence) and Matthew Lassiter (History, University of Michigan), with Susanna Blumenthal (University of Minnesota Law and History), will discuss how documenting the efforts and outcomes of police reform initiatives can influence ongoing and future measures. They will explore the challenges of creating an archive that not only records the history of police reform, but also serves as a dynamic resource for future research, policymaking, and activism. 
 

Image: Pastor Danny Givens addresses the crowd at a rally for Philando Castile outside the Governor's residence, St. Paul, Jul 7, 2016. Credit Lorie Shaull via Flickr.

 

The 2024-25 (In)Justice Series on Just Policing presented by the Institute for Advanced Study at the UMN critically examines how policing intersects with broader societal issues across the globe and explores efforts to reform, transform, or abolish policing. Presented in partnership with the Andrew W. Mellon-funded Sawyer Seminar on Just Policing.

 

About the Presenters

Michelle Gross is the president of Communities United Against Police Violence (CUAPV), a Twin-Cities based organization that works to create a climate of resistance to abuse of authority by police organizations and to empower local people with a structure that can take on police brutality and actually bring it to an end. CUAPV provides support for survivors of police brutality and families of victims so they can reclaim their dignity and join the struggle to end police brutality. She has a 40-year background as an activist and community organizer involved in a number of social justice issues, including anti-racism, criminal justice, and reproductive rights work.

Matthew D. Lassiter, Louis Evans Professor of History and Arthur F. Thurnau Professor at the University of Michigan, is a scholar of the twentieth-century United States with a research and teaching focus on political history, urban/suburban studies, racial and social inequality, and the history of policing and the carceral state. He is the author of The Suburban Crisis: White America and the War on Drugs (Princeton University Press 2023), The Silent Majority: Suburban Politics in the Sunbelt South (Princeton University Press 2006), co-editor of The Myth of Southern Exceptionalism (Oxford University Press 2009), and lead author of the website exhibit of Detroit Under Fire: Police Violence, Crime Politics, and the Struggle for Racial Justice in the Civil Rights Era (U-M Carceral State Project 2021). Lassiter is co-director of the University of Michigan’s Carceral State Project and is co-PI of its Documenting Criminalization, Confinement, and Resistance research initiative. He is also director of the affiliated Policing and Social Justice HistoryLab, which involves undergraduate and graduate student researchers in collaborative public engagement projects.

About the Moderator

Susanna L. Blumenthal is the William L. Prosser Professor of Law and Professor of History at the University of Minnesota. She is the author of Law and the Modern Mind: Consciousness and Responsibility in American Legal Culture (Harvard University Press 2016). Her current research examines law’s role in policing the borderland between capitalism and crime. Longer term projects center on violence and its regulation in carceral institutions in United States history.

Know Before You Go

Accessibility & Accommodations

Institute for Advanced Study (In)Justice Series events are professionally captioned and are available either in person at the Best Buy Theater at Northrop or online via Zoom. Some accommodation requests may take us time to arrange, so please make requests for this event by Wed, Mar 5, 2025. If you are registering after this date, please still reach out to us so we can explore available options. Contact: Carolina Maranon-Cobos, gust0952@umn.edu.

Institute for Advanced Study