Book contents
- Neighborhood Watch
- Neighborhood Watch
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- A Note on Language
- Introduction A Personal Protection Agency
- 1 Cycles of Racial Fear
- 2 White Caller Crime
- 3 Just a Hunch
- 4 Defending White Space
- 5 Unqualified Immunity
- 6 Permanent Fear
- 7 Rethinking Maximum Policing
- 8 Resisting a “Shoot First, Think Later” Culture
- Epilogue “Send Her Back”
- Index
4 - Defending White Space
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 May 2022
- Neighborhood Watch
- Neighborhood Watch
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- A Note on Language
- Introduction A Personal Protection Agency
- 1 Cycles of Racial Fear
- 2 White Caller Crime
- 3 Just a Hunch
- 4 Defending White Space
- 5 Unqualified Immunity
- 6 Permanent Fear
- 7 Rethinking Maximum Policing
- 8 Resisting a “Shoot First, Think Later” Culture
- Epilogue “Send Her Back”
- Index
Summary
Weaponizing phone lines to enforce white spaces has proven an effective tool for the passively fearful. In most cases, it lends anonymity, allowing a racially fragile citizen to lodge a complaint and recede into the shadows as armed agents of the State assume responsibility. Akin to keyboard warriors and internet trolls, 911 abusers can lob unsubstantiated attacks and escape involvement or scrutiny themselves. But this type of color line enforcement is a step removed from the action. It relies on a 911 dispatcher and a trained law enforcement officer to act on the frivolous, race-baiting tip. Some white space defenders want to be more involved, to take the law into their own hands under the guise of self-defense. Thanks to gun rights lobbies and state legislatures across the country, now they can. No trend better encapsulates the State’s increasing acquiescence to civilian weaponization of racial fear than Stand Your Ground laws. These laws fly in the face of traditional self-defense doctrine, posing a serious threat to public safety “by encouraging armed vigilantism
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Neighborhood WatchPolicing White Spaces in America, pp. 85 - 103Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022