Introduction
Transitional justice is a way for societies to come to terms with injustice and violence, particularly in the context of a formal democratic regime change. Truth commissions and reparations are among transitional justice’s various mechanisms and aim to provide accountability for past abuses and to lay the groundwork for democratic rule to supplant the rule of force.
Within the transitional justice literature, it is contentious as to how to conceptualize injustice and violence in the context of Global North nations like the United States. Black Americans, particularly those who live in segregated, low-income communities, are subject disproportionately to police violence, overpunishment, and a wide range of structural inequalities. Is the United States a transitional context? There is little doubt that the mechanisms of transitional justice can be used in societies that are not undergoing a formal regime change. Truth commissions and reparations programs have taken place in countries like the United States, Canada, and Australia to address legacies of historical injustices (Ladisch and Roccatello, Reference Ladisch and Roccatello2021). However, as Rosemary Nagy (Reference Nagy2008) writes, “it is also rather awkward to affix the label ‘transitional’ to justice long denied in liberal democracies. To say that the transition to democracy is as yet incomplete or that we are transitioning to a reconciled, more just society, may overly broaden notions of democratisation or transition” (p. 281). There is, in other words, a potential misnomer in describing anti-Black institutional racism in the United States as a transitional context. What is specifically transitional about this context—namely, an in-progress regime change—is arguably lost in such a description.
This article analyzes imprisonment and policing-based state violence against Black Americans using a transitional justice framework. Drawing on Colleen Murphy’s (Reference Murphy2017) recent conceptual work, we discuss the political situation of low-income Black communities in terms of three categories for identifying transitional contexts: normalized collective and political wrongdoing, pervasive structural inequality, and the failure of the rule of law. But, we argue, there are also respects in which the United States departs from paradigmatic transitional contexts. An important insight about the meaning of transitional justice in the Global North follows. An ever-present hazard is the exclusive focus on transitional justice’s mechanisms and a reckoning with history while failing to acknowledge when present circumstances warrant a full-blown regime change. (“Regimes” can be understood not only as the formal structures of governance, but also as political orders.) The mechanisms of truth and reparation are essential for accountability; but unless we conceptualize the United States as in need of a transition, there is only so much these mechanisms would accomplish. A transitional justice perspective, then, shows that there needs to be what contemporary abolitionists have long recognized: a complete transformation in the existing way of policing and punishing Black people in the United States. This, paired with truth and reparation, would be transitional justice.
In addition to making this argument our analysis has two further aims. First, it advances the debate on the applicability of transitional justice theory to the Global North, working out the commonalities between the U.S. and paradigmatic transitional contexts and discussing what it means for Global North countries to undergo a transition. In particular, we argue for the relevance of “abolition democracy” to conceptualizing regime change in the context of the United States. This concept originated in the thought of W. E. B. Du Bois (Reference Du Bois[1935]1998) and is taken up by Angela Y. Davis (Reference Davis2005) and the contemporary prison abolition movement.
Second, in public discussion about reparations to Black Americans, transitional justice is an infrequently used but powerful concept. Those who advocate including Global North nations in transitional justice’s scope are at least in part motivated by the objectionableness of marking out “emerging democracies” that require transitional justice in order to become like “established democracies,” where the concerns of transitional justice ostensibly do not apply (e.g., Hansen Reference Hansen2011, p. 40). Against the backdrop of a racial ideology “that blames Blacks themselves for their poorer relative economic standing, seeing it as the function of perceived cultural inferiority” instead of an unjust and dysfunctional sociopolitical order, there is rhetorical power in showing what the present-day United States has in common with pre-transitional contexts that are widely recognized as such (Bobo and Kleugel, Reference Bobo, Kluegel, Tuch and Martin1997, p. 95).
Transitional Justice in the United States?
Let us begin by looking more closely at the question of whether Global North countries can be characterized as “transitional.” Authors like Andrew Valls (Reference Valls2003), Stephen Winter (Reference Winter2014), and ourselves (King and Page, Reference King and Page2018) have argued that the tools of transitional justice—truth commissions, reparations, memorialization and memory projects, political apologies, and so on—can help these nations grapple with legacies of violence and exclusion. Using these tools, a society with formally democratic features, such as democratic elections, can work toward becoming a more substantive democracy. Adjoa A. Aiyetoro (Reference Aiyetoro2011) makes the formal–substantive democracy distinction in the context of the United States. Though Black voter suppression is a continuing threat to the formal democratic status of U.S. elections (Anderson Reference Anderson2018), elections take place at regular, predictable intervals. Notwithstanding the January 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol and the White supremacist politics that fueled it (Nevius Reference Nevius2021; Smith and King, Reference Smith and King2021), so do transitions of power. However, Aiyetoro (Reference Aiyetoro2011) points out, while “many tout the United States as being the most advanced democracy… significant portions of its citizens are living under conditions or vestiges of oppression” (p. 635). True democracy requires substantive democracy, she argues, and “substantive democracy requires each citizen to be valued and heard equally” (p. 636). This is far from the case for the descendants of enslaved persons, but Aiyetoro thinks reparations are a promising pathway to the United States becoming a substantive democracy.
Though Aiyetoro’s aim is to lay out an argument for reparations for Black Americans, not to provide a theory of transitional justice, her formal–substantive democracy distinction offers a way in which the United States might be thought of as a transitional political context. But many scholars understand transitional justice as explicitly concerned with the context of a formal democratic regime change. Harry Hobbs (Reference Hobbs2016) characterizes the field of transitional justice as “wedded to the paradigmatic transition—a liberal democratic state rising from the ashes of a collapsed authoritarian regime” (p. 512).Footnote 1 This is the context Ruti G. Teitel (Reference Teitel2014) was thinking of in her writings that brought the term “transitional justice” to mainstream scholarly attention in the early 1990s; the same goes for Neil J. Kritz’s (Reference Kritz1995) four-volume Transitional Justice: How Emerging Democracies Reckon with Former Regimes (Arthur Reference Arthur2009). Alexandra Barahona de Brito and colleagues (Reference Brito, González-Enríquez, Aguilar, de Brito and González-Enríquez2001) similarly understand transitional justice as addressing the “legacies of repression” that “societies face during a transition from authoritarian or totalitarian to democratic rule” (p. 1). Some definitions, however, see the requirement of a democratic regime change as too narrow, recognizing that in practice, questions of transitional justice can arise after civil or international wars, and that a regime change with democratic aspirations does not necessarily produce democracy. For Anja Mihr (Reference Mihr and Simić2021), transitional justice is “a concept and a process that encompasses a number of different legal, political, and cultural instruments and mechanisms that can strengthen, weaken, enhance, or accelerate processes of regime change and consolidation” (p. 1). Alice MacLachlan and Allen Speight (Reference MacLachlan and Speight2013) see transitional justice’s context as the aftermath “of conflict or regime change, [when] political actors confront questions of individual and collective responsibility—and thus, the need for accountability and legal justice—without stable, recognizable sources of legal and political authority to draw upon” (p. 3).Footnote 2
A recent book by Murphy (Reference Murphy2017) is one of the most thoroughgoing theoretical efforts to conceptualize transitional justice. As Murphy argues, transitional justice isn’t only about the mechanisms that are commonly associated with it. Rather, it is a distinct form of justice that can be achieved (or not) in the domain to which it is specific. Just as distributive justice concerns the domain of how goods and opportunities are allocated and corrective justice concerns the domain of civil wrongs, transitional justice concerns the “just pursuit of societal transformation” (Murphy Reference Murphy2017, p. 112). Paradigmatic transitional contexts include the end of apartheid rule in South Africa, the end of the Bosnian War, and the recent peace agreement between the Colombian government and The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) (cf. Ní Aoláin and Campbell, Reference NíAoláin and Campbell2005, pp. 179-182). In such contexts, whether the future will bring stability or a reemergence of past violence is a genuinely uncertain matter—one study shows that ninety percent of civil wars in the 2000s are the resumption of civil wars that had previously ended (Walter Reference Walter2015). What happens in the transition period can thus play an important role in promoting a lasting peace. According to Murphy (Reference Murphy2017), transitional justice aims at transforming societies characterized by four necessary conditions: normalized collective and political wrongdoing, pervasive structural inequality, serious existential uncertainty, and fundamental uncertainty about authority.
Authors who think that the tools of transitional justice can be applied without considering the current United States a bona fide transitional context have a point: These tools are valuable ways of addressing past and present injustice. At the same time, explicitly considering commonalities between paradigmatic transitional contexts and the United States can ground a penetrating critique of the latter—in particular its imprisonment and policing regime. Two of Murphy’s criteria—normalized collective and political wrongdoing and pervasive structural inequality—apply straightforwardly to the political situation of low-income African American communities under this regime, as does as a third criterion—failure of the rule of law.
Conceptualizing the U.S. Imprisonment and Policing Regime
Normalized Collective and Political Wrongdoing
Murphy (Reference Murphy2017) defines normalized collective and political wrongdoing as “the actions or omissions of particular human beings that result in violations of human rights” (pp. 49-50). Such wrongdoing often targets members of structurally disadvantaged groups—“the vulnerability to abuse and human rights violations increases when there is an absence of minimum level of respect and recognition of the humanity of members of a certain group” (Murphy Reference Murphy2017, p. 61).
Police killings and violence towards Black Americans are a visible example of normalized collective and political wrongdoing. Consider the findings of a 1998 Human Rights Watch report of the United States:
Police abuse remains one of the most serious and divisive human rights violations in the United States. The excessive use of force by police officers, including unjustified shootings, severe beatings, fatal chokings, and rough treatment, persists because overwhelming barriers to accountability make it possible for officers who commit human rights violations to escape due punishment and often to repeat their offenses. Police or public officials greet each new report of brutality with denials or explain that the act was an aberration, while the administrative and criminal systems that should deter these abuses by holding officers accountable instead virtually guarantee them impunity….
In the cities we have examined where such data are available, minorities have alleged human rights violations by police more frequently than White residents and far out of proportion to their representation in those cities. Police have subjected minorities to apparently discriminatory treatment and have physically abused minorities while using racial epithets. Mistreatment may be non-violent harassment and humiliation… At worst, it includes the kinds of extreme violence we feature in this report
(Human Rights Watch 1998, pp. 25, 39).Little has changed in subsequent decades. A report of the United Nations Working Group of Experts on People of African Descent in 2016 identified “alarming levels of police brutality and excessive use of lethal force by law enforcement officials, committed with impunity against people of African descent in the United States” (UNHRC 2016, p. 7). Researchers have found that Black men face a 2.5 times higher risk of being killed by police compared to their White male counterparts, and a 1 in 1000 risk overall (Edwards et al., Reference Edwards, Lee and Esposito2019). Moreover, killings by police are “only the tip of the iceberg in what is a pervasive racial bias in the justice system,” according to the United Nations report (2016, p. 8). Testimonies of Black Americans revealed “a pattern of police practices which violate their human rights: they are disproportionately targeted for police surveillance, and experience and witness public harassment, excessive force, and racial discrimination” (UNHRC 2016, p. 8).
When it comes to Murphy’s concept of normalized collective and political wrongdoing, “normalized” is a key aspect. When state violence is normalized, it is not a matter of bad apple officials acting on their own. Rather, the laws, institutional rules, and norms governing their conduct promote wrongful behavior (Alexander Reference Alexander2010; Bobo and Thompson, Reference Bobo, Thompson, Markus and Moya2010; Butler Reference Butler2016, Reference Butler2017; Carbado Reference Carbado2017; Obasogie and Newman, Reference Newman and Obasogie2018, Reference Obasogie and Newman2019; Obasogie Reference Obasogie2020; Roberts Reference Roberts2007). The cornerstone of Supreme Court jurisprudence on police excessive force, Graham v. Connor (1989), is an illustrative example. Rather than giving clear guidelines about when the use of force by police officers violates the Fourth Amendment rights of individuals (Obasogie and Newman, Reference Obasogie and Newman2019), Graham (1989) instead lays out a standard where the use of force should be judged “from the perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene” (p. 396). The standard purports to be objective, and references the seriousness of the crime, the threat posed by the suspect to the officers or others, and non-compliance by the suspect as factors relevant to assessing whether an officer used force reasonably (Graham 1989). At the same time, it is designed to give weight to “the fact that police officers are often forced to make split-second judgments—in circumstances that are tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving—about the amount of force that is necessary in a particular situation”; the ruling explicitly cautions against evaluating police decisions “with the 20/20 vision of hindsight” (Graham 1989, p. 396). This creates a presumption where a police officer’s judgment is not second-guessed by the court. Even though Graham overturns a prior ruling, Johnson v. Glick (1973), rejecting its requirement of an officer’s bad intent, it agrees with Johnson that “‘Not every push or shove, even if it may later seem unnecessary in the peace of a judge’s chambers’… violates the Fourth Amendment” (Graham 1989, pp. 396-397).
The latitude Graham gives police is captured by the circumstances and outcome of the case itself. Dethorne Graham, a diabetic Black man, was experiencing an insulin shock, went into a store to buy orange juice, but left because the line was too long. Charlotte police found this suspicious, and confronted and arrested Graham. The Court makes no mention of Graham’s resisting arrest—indeed, Graham passed out before he was handcuffed—but the officers’ rough treatment resulted in “a broken foot, cuts on his wrists, a bruised forehead, and an injured shoulder” (Graham 1989, p. 390). On remand, a jury took up the Supreme Court’s newly-minted standard and found that the police had acted reasonably (Obasogie Reference Obasogie2020).
Police interactions are not the only context where African Americans face normalized human rights violations under the U.S. imprisonment and policing regime. A report by the American Civil Liberties Union of Eastern Mississippi, Suffering in Silence: Human Rights Abuses in St. Louis Correctional Centers (2009), relies on the testimony of corrections officers and emergency medical technicians to detail physical and sexual abuse by their colleagues, overcrowded and squalid living conditions, medical inattention, and—inexplicably—the practice of forcing inmates to sit naked in freezing cells during winter months. Alabama state prisons were the subject of a recent U.S. Department of Justice investigation (DOJ 2019), which found systemic failures by the Alabama Department of Corrections to prevent and investigate prisoner-on-prisoner violence, including sexual violence, that often went unreported. This in part resulted from understaffing and the inadequate supervision of prisoners. The DOJ reports of prisoners being “tied up for days” without corrections officers noticing; one prisoner found by guards couldn’t talk due to injuries to his mouth and required an emergency surgery to remove a rectally-inserted broomstick (DOJ 2019). To the extent that deaths are tracked, the homicide rate in Alabama prisons is eight times the national level (DOJ 2019).
Harsh prison conditions are not only for those convicted of crimes; there is also the matter of pretrial detention. Infamously, sixteen-year-old Kalief Browder was accused of stealing a backpack and arrested. He maintained his innocence and spent almost three years awaiting his trial in the Rikers Island prison complex. There Browder endured beatings by corrections officers and other inmates and two years of solitary confinement; after his release, he committed suicide (Schwirtz and Winerip, Reference Schwirtz and Winerip2015). One study shows that the average cost of bail is $2,786 for misdemeanor detainees (Heaton et al., Reference Heaton, Mayson and Stevenson2017). Of the half-million people in pretrial detention in the United States, 43% are Black (Sawyer Reference Sawyer2019).
Perhaps controversially, excessive punishment itself might fall under the heading of normalized collective and political wrongdoing. Mirko Bagaric and colleagues (Reference Bagaric, Gopalan and Florio2017) argue that long prison terms are so threatening to what human rights discourse aims to secure for all human beings that over-imprisonment is a human rights abuse. They make the point that long-term prisoners cannot procreate and are severely restricted in how they participate in family life. Many deemed China’s longtime one-child policy an “assault on human rights” (Tai Reference Tai2016). Why isn’t the situation of long-term prisoners considered thusly? Long prison sentences are also associated with reduced education and employment prospects and lower life expectancy (Bagaric et al, Reference Bagaric, Gopalan and Florio2017), as well as formal collateral consequences such as restrictions on political participation and public housing benefits (Travis Reference Travis, Mauer and Chesney-Lind2002).Footnote 3 These are the precise kinds of deprivations with which human rights frameworks are concerned.
Pervasive Structural Inequality
Even if one rejects the view that over-imprisonment itself counts as normalized collective and political wrongdoing, incarceration is deeply linked to another one of Murphy’s criteria for identifying transitional contexts—pervasive structural inequality. Here, individuals are “differentially limited in the range of opportunities they can feasibly achieve” (Murphy Reference Murphy2017, p. 46). Scholars have found that poor Black children have extremely low rates of mobility, something not explained by class alone. Those coming from homes in the bottom quintile of household income have a 2.5% chance of making it to the top quintile, whereas White children born into the bottom quintile have a 10.6% chance (Chetty et al., Reference Chetty, Hendren, Jones and Porter2020). A study by Bruce Western (Reference Western2002) links income inequality and incarceration: Serving time in prison hinders the development of job skills, creates the stigma of having a criminal record, and makes it hard for individuals to form or maintain employment networks. As Western shows, the income inequality–incarceration link is empirically demonstrable and partially explains the Black–White earnings gap since African Americans face disproportionate imprisonment rates. As of 2018, this was five times the rate of White Americans; for Black men ages thirty-five to thirty-nine, one in twenty were in federal or state prison (Gramlich Reference Gramlich2020).
In addition to facing inequalities in mobility, income, and incarceration—combined with inequalities in wealth (Oliver and Shapiro, Reference Oliver and Shapiro2006), education (Orfield and Frankenberg, Reference Orfield and Frankenberg2014), and health and life expectancy (Jackman and Shauman, Reference Jackman and Shauman2019)—Black residents of segregated, high-poverty communities do not interact with state officials on the same terms as their White, well-to-do counterparts, something Murphy (Reference Murphy2017) identifies as fundamental to a structurally equal society. Monica C. Bell’s (Reference Bell2017) theory of legal estrangement encapsulates Murphy’s point perfectly. Bell contests the common idea that poor Black Americans are second-class citizens in U.S. society: Overpoliced and underprotected by law enforcement institutions, “these groups often see themselves as essentially stateless—unprotected by the law and its enforcers and marginal to the project of making American society” (Bell Reference Bell2017, p. 2057). Legal estrangement describes the collective sense of anomie within marginalized Black communities towards the legal and criminal justice system, paired with the material realities that give rise to anomic group consciousness.
To bring the theoretical concept of legal estrangement to life, Bell tells the story of a Shawna, a youth raised in Gilmor Homes in West Baltimore. An avid basketball player, Shawna was accustomed to games being interrupted by gun violence. When she was younger, she had wanted to be a police officer, but as she grew older, she heard stories of police violence, including sexual assault by a police officer, in her community. She also had negative experiences with police that have led her to avoid West Baltimore’s main shopping center, Mondawmin Mall. These negative experiences would not garner “the attention of journalists, researchers, or most advocates,” says Bell (Reference Bell2017, p. 2095).
She has experienced, at most, (possibly idle) threats—that the next time a police officer sees her, he will mace or even arrest her. These threats, these forceful words, would not register as “uses of force” in the most sophisticated studies of police encounters. Yet they have constrained her movement
(Bell Reference Bell2017, p. 2095).As James Forman, Jr. (Reference Forman2017) similarly observes:
Swearing and yelling, making belittling remarks, issuing illegitimate orders, conducting random and unwarranted searches, demanding that suspects “get against the wall”—these behaviors rarely led to lawsuits or newspaper coverage. But for residents of the city’s poorest neighborhoods, especially young people, this treatment became part of the social contract, a tax paid in exchange for the right to move in public spaces
(p. 171).Bell (Reference Bell2017) characterizes Shawna as “a thoughtful young woman who has never had any serious police encounter, who has managed to avoid getting a criminal record, and who is a general law-abider, wanting to trust the police but convinced that the police are not trustworthy for people like her” (p. 2099). At the same time, Shawna’s alienation towards law enforcement is pronounced—and she no longer wants to be a police officer. “Although Shawna sees the law and its enforcers as worthy of obedience as a theoretical matter,” Bell writes, “she does not believe that law enforcement officials see her, and people like her, as a true part of the polity” (Reference Bell2017, p. 2099).
Accordingly, the structural inequalities between poor Black Americans and their more privileged counterparts should not only be conceptualized in terms of statistical measures of wellbeing, but also in the nature of the relationships between these groups and state institutions. Unequal relationships are not only a matter of practice, but also of law. Paul Butler (Reference Butler2017) makes this point in his analysis of the Supreme Court case Illinois v. Wardlow (2000). The Court had to decide whether police could detain and search an individual who they hadn’t suspected of a crime, but who runs away upon seeing an officer. They ruled that this practice is legal in high-crime areas—“which almost always means minority communities”—and nowhere else (Butler Reference Butler2017, p. 109). This amounts to unequal legal rights: The resident of a middle-income White neighborhood who attempts to evade a police officer has a legal right against being searched, but a resident of a low-income Black neighborhood does not.
Traffic stops are a related element of the U.S. imprisonment and policing regime where African Americans experience structural inequalities. Recent research shows that Black drivers are twice as likely to be pulled over as White drivers (even though White people drive more), and four times as likely to be searched by police (Baumgartner et al., Reference Baumgartner, Epp and Shoub2018). Unsurprisingly, while White Americans report feeling that traffic stops are fair and reasonable, disproportionate stops make Black Americans feel that “they are not regarded as full and equal members of society” (Epp et al., Reference Epp, Maynard-Moody and Haider-Markel2014, p. 16). Many respond by avoiding driving in certain places and changing what clothes they wear. “The notorious pass laws in South Africa under apartheid, which allowed Black people into White areas only if carrying a pass authorizing entry, worked a similar evil,” write Charles R. Epp and colleagues, “and no amount of professional courtesy and respectfulness can hide the deep violation at the core of this practice” (Reference Epp, Maynard-Moody and Haider-Markel2014, p. 16).
A final example of the structural inequalities that African Americans face relates to what Dorothy E. Roberts (Reference Roberts2003) and others call “community harms.” Race plays an outsized role in the relative likelihood that one has a family member, friend, acquaintance, or neighbor who is imprisoned. A study by Hedwig Lee and colleagues (Reference Lee, McCormick, Hicken and Wildeman2015) shows that Black men have incarcerated acquaintances and neighbors at a rate five times higher than White men. Black women experience the imprisonment of family members at a rate eleven times that of White women, meaning that close to half of Black women have one or more relatives serving a prison sentence. Roberts (Reference Roberts2003) describes the psychological and emotional toll that results: “Dealing with an incarcerated relative causes stress, both from worry about the inmate’s well-being and from tension among relatives as they struggle to survive the ordeal. These enormous burdens fall primarily on the shoulders of women caregivers, who customarily shore up families experiencing extreme hardship” (p. 1282). This reality is unsurprising, given the very concept of mass incarceration—viz., a criminal justice system in which, as per David Garland’s (Reference Garland2001) seminal definition, “it ceases to be the incarceration of individual offenders and becomes the systematic imprisonment of whole groups of the population” (p. 2).
Failure of the Rule of Law
Murphy (Reference Murphy2017) does not formally list rule-of-law failure as one of her criteria for identifying transitional contexts, but it nevertheless plays an important analytic role as an aspect of pervasive structural inequality. Securing the rule of law is a necessary, but not sufficient, condition for overcoming pervasive structural inequality and achieving a just societal transformation (Murphy Reference Murphy2017). For our purposes, discussing rule-of-law failure in low-income Black communities highlights a distinctive third commonality between the U.S. context and traditional transitional contexts.
The rule of law is an essential part of any stable and legitimate political order. When the rule of law is present, this allows political subjects to make informed decisions concerning their own conduct and its legality. Here, it is widely known what the law is and the ways in which it will be enforced. If you, as a political subject, want to avoid engaging in illegal activities, chances are that you will know how to avoid engaging in illegal activities: Don’t commit crimes and the criminal justice apparatus of the state will not bother you. “When the requirements of the rule of law are respected, legal rules shape the general contour of political relationships…” Murphy (Reference Murphy2017) writes. “When declared legal rules actually govern conduct, citizens can… form reliable expectations, based on legal rules, of how other citizens and officials will respond to their actions” (p. 124).
There are many ways in which the U.S. imprisonment and policing regime falls short of instantiating the rule of law, especially in low-income African American communities. Given that the present-day imprisonment and policing regime in the United States is closely linked to a longstanding “law and order” ideology, this is cruelly ironic (Alexander Reference Alexander2010; Hinton Reference Hinton2016; Murakawa Reference Murakawa, Lowndes, Novkov and Warren2008, Reference Murakawa2014). Thomas Hobbes (Reference Hobbes and Curley[1651]1994), once characterized good laws as “needful, for the good of the people, and withal perspicuous” (p. 229). Many misdemeanor statutes in the United States fail the Hobbesian standard. Take §18.2-322 of the Virginia Code, which makes public spitting a Class 4 misdemeanor. Spitting on a sidewalk may be gross, but it is not harmful, and importantly, is not the kind of thing that individuals typically think about when they reflect on what the law prohibits. Yet laws against public spitting and other order maintenance laws converge into a body of criminalized conduct that is extremely large. The scale of order-maintenance offenses is such that they could never be regularly enforced across the broader U.S. population without this smacking of totalitarian rule. Instead, enforcement is a matter of police discretion. Individual officers are licensed to arrest individuals for extremely arbitrary and subjective reasons in West Baltimore, where Shawna lives, and other communities like it—a hallmark indicator of the absence of the rule of law.
An important recent study by Alexandra Natapoff (Reference Natapoff2018) is devoted to the arbitrariness of the U.S. misdemeanor system. Natapoff provides case after case of individuals arrested and punished for conduct that no reasonable person would imagine to be legally culpable. Sometimes individuals are arrested for minor, selectively-enforced order-maintenance offenses. Sometimes a police officer interprets perfectly innocuous and legal conduct as something other than what it is. An arrest is then made, the accused pressured into a guilty plea or convicted for a misdemeanor by a judge in less than three minutes (Natapoff Reference Natapoff2018). The lived reality of law-and-order-driven rule-of-law failure is harsh. A misdemeanor conviction may mean losing a driver’s license or a brief prison stay, which can easily lead to the loss of employment. A criminal record, even if one misdemeanor is the only item on it, can be grounds for rejecting a job applicant. Fines and court fees can be prohibitively expensive for a low-wage earner, and a failure to pay can have big consequences—more fines, an arrest warrant in your name, and jail time. “In this manner,” Natapoff writes, “the misdemeanor process confers relatively unfettered authority on police to formally transform Black men into petty criminals based on minor, often harmless conduct, and sometimes even when they are doing nothing at all” (Reference Natapoff2018, p. 157).
Rule-of-law failure is often associated with corrupt state officials. This kind of corruption is certainly reported in the United States. In an interview study of youths living on Chicago’s South Side, a teen named Christopher describes an encounter with police where “They stopped us, and they asked me where the fuck I’m going. Then that’s when they went in my pockets, threw my keys, and took my money” (Futterman et al., Reference Futterman, Hunt and Kalven2016, p. 134). A recent book by Baltimore Sun journalist Justin Fenton (Reference Fenton2021) is devoted to Baltimore police sergeant Wayne Jenkins and other members of the elite Gun Trace Task Force, whose crimes included the targeted theft of money and drugs from victims deliberately chosen for their perceived lack of epistemic credentials.
However, it might also be construed as a failure of the rule of law when fines and court fees make up significant municipal revenue streams. The Department of Justice’s pattern-or-practice investigation of the Ferguson, MO police department notoriously found that Ferguson municipal court’s “primary goal” was not “administering justice or protecting the rights of the accused,” but rather, funding the city coffers: “City, police, and court officials for years have worked in concert to maximize revenue at every stage of the enforcement process, beginning with how fines and fine enforcement processes are established” (DOJ 2015, pp. 42, 10). Here the municipal code itself plays a key role, “address[ing] nearly every aspect of civic life for those who live in Ferguson”—for example, barking and off-leash dogs and grass that grows too high (DOJ 2015, p. 7). (Again, Thomas Hobbes: “Unnecessary laws are not good laws; but traps for money” (Reference Hobbes and Curley[1651]1994, p. 229).) Researchers have found that the more time police devote to collecting revenue, the less violence and property crime are addressed (Goldstein et al., Reference Goldstein, Sances and You2020). There is, moreover, a strong correlation between a city’s reliance on fines and fees for revenue generation and the percentage of residents who are Black (Sances and You, Reference Sances and You2017; Singla et al., Reference Singla, Kirschner and Stone2020).
Another source of revenue is the practice of civil asset forfeiture. Colloquially referred to as “legal larceny,” civil asset forfeiture allows a person’s property to be seized if police allege that it has been used in the commission of a crime. A 2015 Institute for Justice report uses the example of Philadelphia to describe how a city can serve as “a forfeiture machine”:
Pennsylvania state law enables agencies to retain 100 percent of the value of forfeited property, and law enforcement in Philadelphia took in more than $69 million between 2002 and 2013. That total comprises more than 1200 houses, 3400 vehicles, $47 million in cash, and various other items, such as electronics and jewelry. The total also represents almost one-fifth of the district attorney’s general, appropriated budget. With those funds, Philadelphia has paid for equipment, maintenance, education and training, and salaries of personnel, this last of which represents the most direct conflict of interest for the unbiased administration of justice. Conspicuously, Philadelphia spent none of its forfeiture funds on proactive, community-based anti-drug and crime prevention programs, despite proponents’ claims that forfeiture funds are essential to supporting such efforts
(Carpenter et al., Reference Carpenter, Knepper, Erickson and McDonald2015, p. 16).The report also tells the story of Charles Clarke, a Black college student whose life savings were taken by police who searched him for marijuana at the airport. Clarke carried $11,000 on him because he was in the middle of moving and didn’t have a bank in the area to deposit it in, but officers didn’t believe him. Though they charged him with no crimes—there was no evidence he had committed any—taking his money didn’t require this (Carpenter et al., Reference Carpenter, Knepper, Erickson and McDonald2015). Fortunately for Clarke, the Institute for Justice, a libertarian public interest law firm, took on his case pro bono and got his money back (Institute for Justice 2016). Many other individuals in his position are not so lucky. Legal fees can be higher than the value of the seized assets themselves, and the most common standard of proof in civil forfeiture cases is a preponderance-of-evidence standard, setting an extremely low bar for the government to prove its case (Carpenter et al., Reference Carpenter, Knepper, Erickson and McDonald2015). The rule-of-law failure that legal larceny represents is hardly colorblind: a recent study of 2278 police departments across the United States found that the forfeiture revenue of cities correlates strongly with the percentage of residents who are racial minorities (Nicholson-Crotty et al., Reference Nicholson-Crotty, Nicholson-Crotty, Li and Mughan2021).
Is the United States a Transitional Political Context?
The U.S. imprisonment and policing regime has been characterized as involving normalized collective and political wrongdoing, pervasive structural inequality, and the failure of the rule of law. Such an institutional order is seriously deficient from the standpoint of justice, so much so that “there exists a right to rebel” (Murphy Reference Murphy2017, p. 47). In his book on the political ethics of urban ghettos, Tommie Shelby (Reference Shelby2016) argues this point at length. When the Black residents of segregated inner-city neighborhoods “engage in criminal activity or show contempt for legal requirements and law enforcement officials, this is widely regarded as a blameworthy failure of reciprocity on their part,” Shelby observes, but “no citizen can be expected to tolerate serious, burdensome, and repeated injustices over the course of their lives” (Reference Shelby2016, pp. 214-215). Shelby draws on John Rawls’ ideal of society as a fair system of social cooperation, something that undergirds the legitimacy of the state’s claim to political authority and the obligations of individuals to comply with the law. A Rawlsian framework suggests that if the basic structure of society is deeply unjust, for those unjustly disadvantaged, there is no binding duty of obedience to the law, and self-respect may even require out-and-out defiance of it (Shelby Reference Shelby2016).
If normalized collective and political wrongdoing, pervasive structural inequality, and the failure of the rule of law are features of a deeply unjust regime—to such an extent that they generate a right of disobedience—are these features also sufficient to consider the United States a transitional political context? Murphy (Reference Murphy2017) posits two additional criteria—serious existential uncertainty and fundamental uncertainty about authority—for identifying transitional societies. Let us consider each in turn.
Serious Existential Uncertainty
The category of serious existential uncertainty refers to the idea that transitions sometimes result from the cessation of war or negotiations between representatives of warring groups. Here, it is widely understood to be a tense and fragile political moment, where it is unclear “whether a particular moment is the temporary turbulence of the ancient regime or really a break that might lead somewhere new” (Murphy Reference Murphy2017, p. 67). At first glance, the idea of serious existential uncertainty seems potentially fitting as a description of the racial justice protests of Freedom Summer 2020. The peaceful demonstrations that erupted across the United States and worldwide after George Floyd’s death in Minneapolis saw clashes between law enforcement and protesters. Vandalism and rioting broke out, with the left blaming right-wing extremists who showed up and the right blaming leftist anarchists and antifa (MacFarquhar Reference MacFarquhar2020). Against this backdrop, there were calls to defund the police that seemed to move some public officials and law enforcement budget cuts were implemented. There seemed to be the possibility of transformative change, with protestors telling the press, “This time is different” (Sobey Reference Sobey2020).
If a complete overhaul of the U.S. imprisonment and policing regime comes about, then surely the protests of 2020 will go down in the history books as a crucial moment in the transition. Many states are undertaking police reform, and at the time of this writing, the Department of Justice’s current budget proposal shows attempts to reduce racial profiling, excessive force, and practices like “no-knock” warrants (Jenkins Reference Jenkins2021; Treisman Reference Treisman2021; Wilson Reference Wilson2021). Furthermore, the prison population in the United States has been in gradual decline since 2009. However, though some experts decreed “the beginning of the end of mass incarceration” (Goode Reference Goode2013), more recent analyses show that the current rate of decline is not enough to change the overall fact of mass incarceration (Ghandnoosh Reference Ghandnoosh2020; see also Martin and Price, Reference Martin and Price2016). Dismantling mass incarceration would seem to need to be a matter of public policy, undertaken at the state, federal, and local levels, deliberately aimed at this end (Epperson and Pettus-Davis, Reference Epperson and Pettus-Davis2017). Todd R. Clear (Reference Clear2021) puts the matter succinctly: “[A]s a matter of policy, we determine how many people are in prison. If we want a smaller prison population in the United States, we should send fewer people to prison, and make the stays of those we send to prison shorter” (p. 257). Evelyn J. Patterson (Reference Patterson2017) emphasizes the importance of sending fewer people to prison—via decriminalization and alternative sentencing practices—as her model shows shortening prison stays to have only a modest effect on reducing the prison population size.
There is some evidence emerging of the political will for ending mass incarceration. A 2015 book features essays critical of mass incarceration from politicians across the political spectrum, including conservative figures like Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, and Scott Walker (Chettiar and Waldman, Reference Chettiar and Waldman2015). “Our nation is beginning to understand certain fundamental truths,” reads the volume’s introduction. “Mass incarceration exists. It is not needed to keep down crime. It comes at a huge cost to the country. And there are practical solutions on which we can agree to reduce our prison population, while keeping the country safe” (Chettiar and Waldman, Reference Chettiar and Waldman2015, p. 1; but see Gilmore Reference Gilmore2015). However, as Peter K. Enns (Reference Enns2016) argues, the problem is not just politicians. It is also a punitive American public. The end of mass incarceration is unlikely if U.S. voters remain committed to a punishment paradigm and fail to see crime as a public health problem (Pfaff Reference Pfaff2017). Of course, the latter is easier when drug crimes are the issue; it is much harder when the issue is violent crime, with its tangible, sometimes life-altering impact on the lives of victims. Indeed, violent crime is on the rise, a political liability for Democrats (Olsen Reference Olsen2021). While journalists question the wisdom of the idea of defunding the police, a number of cities are reversing the budget cuts they had made (Jamerson Reference Elinson, Frosch and Jamerson2021).
In light of all this, does U.S. society qualify as a society that is experiencing serious existential uncertainty? It seems that this judgment would be premature at the moment. We might imagine a future where U.S. voters and public officials no longer saw the solution to violence as more violence, where there were deep, long-term policy commitments to decarceration and depolicing across the nation. Here, a number of existential questions would likely arise. Would there be the political will, energy, and resources for providing mental health care, education access, and job opportunities in communities that are currently underserved and overpoliced? Would underlying structural inequalities be transformed? If crime rates increased, would a decarceration and depolicing regime be hastily replaced with a return to the “law and order” days of old? As we read Murphy, this is the kind of political context that would indicate that the United States is truly a society in transition, not our current one, where the grip of the present imprisonment and policing regime remains strong.
Fundamental Uncertainty about Authority
This brings us to Murphy’s other category, fundamental uncertainty about authority. Here, the United States seems to depart strongly from paradigm transitional contexts—the category describes political situations where “citizens and sometimes officials in transitional circumstances do not assume, and indeed in some cases openly question and challenge, the authority of the new government” (Murphy Reference Murphy2017, p. 74). Though numerous examples could be brought in as illustrations, take just one—that of East Timor. Colonized by Portugal in the sixteenth century, East Timor declared independence in 1975 but was immediately annexed by Indonesia. A military occupation ensued; subsequent decades saw the killings of civilians and protestors, displacement, forced starvation, torture, and military sex slavery. An increasingly organized East Timorese resistance movement, a new Indonesian president, and a series of diplomatic negotiations led to an UN-sponsored independence vote on August 30, 1999, where the people of Timor-Leste overwhelmingly voted to break from Indonesia. The military responded with what Jovana Davidovic (Reference Davidovic, May and Forcehimes2012) characterizes as a scorched-earth response: “Close to half of East Timor’s population was displaced, over seventy percent of all infrastructure was destroyed, and 1300 people were killed in the violence that erupted prior to and after the vote” (p. 84). Australian military and UN security forces staged a successful humanitarian intervention, and in October 1999, helped establish a transitional administration which held power until 2002. In May of that year, a parliamentary government took over, completing the East Timorese independence process (see Auweraert Reference Auweraert2012; Davidovic Reference Davidovic, May and Forcehimes2012; Evans Reference Evans2012; Fernandes Reference Fernandes, Barria and Roper2010).
Though normalized collective and political wrongdoing, pervasive structural inequality, and the failure of the rule of law long characterized East Timor, two political periods referenced above reveal fundamental uncertainty about authority. The first is in the mid-1970s, when East Timor rapidly went from being a Portuguese colony to an independent nation to an Indonesian occupied territory. The second is the period from 1999 to 2002. It looked like the independence vote outcome would be violently repressed until international security forces intervened. Fragile political circumstances were then overseen by two governments, the United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor and the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste, before the political situation stabilized under the latter. On Murphy’s understanding, these two periods are appropriately characterized as transitional. The first, of course, resulted in further upheaval and repression, while the second brought the independence the East Timorese people had for so long sought.
It is valuable to identify what is distinctive about political contexts like East Timor’s and to distinguish these from contexts like that of the United States. In East Timor, there were a clear and identifiable regime changes that created a “uniquely liminal moment” between the past and future (Gray Reference Gray2010, p. 62). When transitional justice mechanisms were implemented to provide truth, accountability, and reparations for the violent abuses associated with the Indonesian military occupation, there was a widespread understanding that the days of military rule were over. Of course, the transition did not assure the end of violence: The first few years of independence saw riots and political volatility, and in 2006, an attempted coup resulted in over three dozen deaths and the destruction of over a thousand homes (Auweraert Reference Auweraert2012). Nevertheless, as a clear-cut empirical matter, a regime change had taken place. However, if no regime change occurs, using the tools of transitional justice in order to construct a liminal moment between the past and future risks superficiality.Footnote 4 In Red Skin, White Masks: Rejecting the Colonial Politics of Recognition, Glen Sean Coulthard (Reference Coulthard2014) is critical of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada and Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s 2008 apology. Both treated residential school abuses as part of an unjust past while remaining silent on the present injustice of denying Indigenous nations a land base and political self-determination. As such, Canada’s program of transitional justice buttressed an illusory narrative asserting that its injustices towards First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples were the product of a bygone illiberal era, and that there had at one point been a regime change: In fact, settler-colonialism was and is very much the Canadian modus operandi. Importantly, the issue wasn’t simply a matter of acknowledging the past while failing to acknowledge the present. Acknowledgment can only go so far. If Canada had recognized its colonial present, this would not have been the same as decolonization (Fisher Reference Fisher2021).
Increasingly in the United States, the tools of transitional justice are cited as the appropriate response to the country’s imprisonment and policing regime, as well as to structural and institutional anti-Black racism more broadly. In 2015, the city of Chicago passed a reparations ordinance containing material and symbolic forms of redress for the African American victims of police torture—suffocation and electric shocks were among the methods used to forcibly extract confessions—in the 1970s and 1980s (Taylor Reference Taylor2016). Bryan Stevenson (Reference Stevenson and Davis2017), founder and director of the Equal Justice Initiative, advocates a national “process of truth and reparation” as the appropriate way of addressing mass incarceration (p. 4). Journalist Juleyka Lantigua Williams (Reference Williams2018) proposes layered reparations and an official apology to persons whose socioeconomic background led to their imprisonment. Others advocate for municipalities to pay reparations to the families of victims of police killings (Page Reference Page2019); there is also discussion of Drug War reparations (Flanigan and Freiman, Reference Flanigan and Freiman2020).
The most prominent proposed path to federal-level reparations for slavery, Jim Crow, and present-day structures of anti-Black racism is laid out in the bill H.R. 40. Introduced in the House of Representatives every Congressional session since 1989, H.R. 40 would set up a commission to study proposals for reparations to African Americans (Congress.gov 2021a, 2021b). The current version has 188 cosponsors, more than at any other point in the bill’s history, and hearings were held on it in 2019 and 2021. Another Congressional resolution aims at establishing a U.S. Commission on Truth, Racial Healing, and Transformation (Congress.gov 2021c, 2021d). A 2019 Business Insider poll found support for reparations among 54% of survey respondents identifying as moderately or very liberal, suggesting a sizeable shift among a share of White liberals in recent times (Haltiwanger and Hickey, Reference Haltiwanger and Hickey2019; cf. Dawson and Popoff, Reference Dawson and Popoff2004). State and local efforts around truth and reparation are currently taking place in Maryland, California, Evanston, IL, Chicago, IL, Asheville, NC, Burlington, VT, Amherst, MA, and Providence, RI (O’Brien and Ax, Reference O’Brien and Ax2021).
There is little doubt that the progress towards reparations is a momentous achievement on the part of reparations advocates and activists, especially considering the U.S. government’s longstanding refusal of redress to formerly enslaved people and their descendants (Berry Reference Berry2005; Boxill Reference Boxill2003). But there is a danger of seizing upon the tools of transitional justice—the promise of truth and reparation—as a way of reckoning with the past and present without simultaneously undertaking measures that constitute a genuine break with both. In this respect, it is worth emphasizing the ways in which the present-day United States is not transitional political context. To deny that the United States is currently in a moment of transition is to call attention to the insufficiency of existing efforts to move away from its imprisonment and policing regime. “It may be normatively desirable to end repressive regimes and longstanding conflicts,” Murphy writes, “but a society is only transitional when there are efforts taken to realize this end” (Reference Murphy2017, p. 70).
Regime Change in the United States and Abolition Democracy
When transitional injustice mechanisms such as truth-telling and reparations programs are implemented in the Global North, the context is not that of a traditional regime change, where one government dissolves and a newly-constituted government replaces it. It is worth concluding our analysis with a discussion of what a genuine transition would look like in Global North countries—an area of the transitional justice literature that is greatly undertheorized, we should add. Is it even meaningful to use the language of “regime change”?
In our view, it is. The word “regime” has different meanings: It can mean a government, and also, a way of doing things. This latter sense of “regime” is closely connected to what American Political Development scholars refer to as an “institutional order”—viz., “a coalition of governing state institutions, nonstate political institutions, and political actors that is bound together by broadly similar senses of the goals, rules, roles and boundaries that members… wish to see shaping political life” (King and Smith, Reference King and Smith2005, p. 78). For Desmond King and Rogers M. Smith (Reference King and Smith2005), there is never just one institutional order operating at a given time. Rather, competing institutional orders form the backdrop to politically contested issues. Competition between two salient racial institutional orders—a “White supremacist” order and an “egalitarian transformative” order—“explain[s] many features of American politics that may appear unrelated to race, such as congressional organization, bureaucratic autonomy, and modern immigration priorities,” they argue (King and Smith, Reference King and Smith2005, p. 78). At the same time, one racial institutional order may completely dominate the other in a given political arena, such as that of the criminal justice system. When an institutional order is dominant, it helps form and maintain a regime manifesting its internal logic. In the criminal justice context, a White supremacist racial institutional order—and its successor, an “antitransformative” racial order that has responded to racial egalitarianism’s “bar[ring] the deployment of overtly white supremacist language” (King and Smith, Reference King and Smith2005, p. 84)—have undergirded what we have been calling the U.S. imprisonment and policing regime.
Many scholars have argued for the centrality of race in explaining the rise of U.S. mass incarceration beginning in the 1970s. Prior to this decade, crime rates were going up, but as Jeremy Travis and colleagues (Reference Travis, Western and Redburn2014) argue, “the best single proximate explanation of the rise in incarceration is not rising crime rates, but the policy choices made by legislators to greatly increase the use of imprisonment as a response to crime” (p. 3). On Vesla M. Weaver’s (Reference Weaver2007) theory, the policy choices that gave rise to mass incarceration were not only backlash to the Civil Rights Movement by White elites, as some have proposed, but something more insidious: “frontlash,” where “losers in a conflict become the architects of a new program, manipulating the issue space and altering the dimension of the conflict in an effort to regain their command of the agenda” (p 236). Michelle Alexander (Reference Alexander2010) uses the lens of racial control to analyze the War on Drugs, with mass incarceration functioning to uphold a racial caste system. Similarly, Naomi Murakawa (Reference Murakawa2014) emphasizes the ideology of “racial liberalism” espoused by White liberals in the postwar period, describing how it gave rise to a racialized law-and-order agenda and the carceral state. However, the picture painted by Weaver, Alexander, and Murakawa has not been uncritically accepted. Forman (Reference Forman2017) and Michael Javen Fortner (Reference Fortner2015) each highlight how African Americans contributed to mass incarceration, particularly members of the Black middle class. John Pfaff (Reference Pfaff2015) writes about a shift in prosecutor behavior in the early 1990s, revealing a new kind of punitiveness “inspired in no small part by a desire to use the criminal justice system (perhaps poorly) to try to rectify structural problems in relatively high-crime communities” (p. 177). Elizabeth Hinton’s (Reference Hinton2016) analysis complements Pfaff’s in certain respects: she discusses how the War on Crime that began in the 1960s was a deeply misguided effort to address poverty-related problems faced by economically struggling Black communities. However, the concept of a racial institutional order does not require explicit White supremacist/antitransformative intent—or conversely, egalitarian transformative intent—but rather describes the “pressures to alter or to maintain the nation’s racial ordering” operating at a subterranean level (King and Smith, Reference King and Smith2005, p. 84). To deny that racial institutional orders matter to the U.S. imprisonment and policing regime is to deny that race matters. This, few would deny.
This brings us to regime change in the Global North. Here, as Fionnuala Ní Aoláin and Colm Campbell (Reference NíAoláin and Campbell2005) argue, the idea of sweeping political change often meets stubborn resistance: “Whereas nondemocratic societies may be faced with demands for institutional transformation, in democratic societies the imperative is typically to reform rather than to transform” (p. 187). A strong presumption that Global North countries “do not commit systematic violations of human rights” is operative, based on the notion that “once the initial breach is discovered, [a country’s] own internal human rights protections should provide correctives and prevent reoccurrence” (Ní Aoláin and Campbell, Reference NíAoláin and Campbell2005, p. 207). But systematic violations of human rights do occur, thus “the language of reform alone may not be sufficient to deliver the institutional and structural changes demanded by the transitional process” (Ní Aoláin and Campbell, Reference NíAoláin and Campbell2005, p. 187). Hence the utility of the language of regime change in the Global North context: There is a built-in contrast with reformist efforts that preserve the status quo. What would it mean for the United States to undergo a regime change, then? In our view, if an egalitarian transformative racial institutional order came to dominate over its White supremacist/antitransformative counterpart, and was the fundamental determinant of what punishment and policing looked like in the United States, this would amount to a genuine transition.
This way of thinking about transitional justice in the United States has a connection with abolition democracy. In present-day activist circles, abolition democracy “calls for a constellation of democratic institutions and practices to displace policing and imprisonment while working to realize more equitable and fair conditions of collective life” (McLeod Reference McLeod2018, p. 1618). The term was originally coined by Du Bois (Reference Du Bois[1935]1998) to describe a Reconstruction-era ethos that didn’t see ending slavery as sufficient, but was “convinced that [abolition] could be thoroughly accomplished only if the emancipated Negroes became free citizens and voters” incorporated “into the body civil, politic, and social, of the United States” (Du Bois Reference Du Bois[1935]1998, pp. 184, 189).Footnote 5 Davis (Reference Davis2005) argues for the relevance of abolition democracy to contemporary abolitionist projects. “[I]t is not only, or not even primarily, about abolition as a negative process of tearing down, but it is also about building up, about creating new institutions,” she writes (p. 73). We cannot abolish prisons “by wielding axes and literally hacking at prison walls” but must demand “new democratic institutions that take up the issues that can never be addressed by prisons in productive ways” (Davis Reference Davis2005, p. 76). In her essay, “Constructing a Criminal Justice System Free of Racial Bias: An Abolitionist Framework,” Roberts (Reference Roberts2007) takes a similar stance. She proposes various measures aimed at dismantling the system of mass incarceration, from halting the construction of new prisons to outlawing the death penalty. “Abolishing these institutions should be accompanied by a redirection of criminal justice spending to rebuild the neighborhoods that they have devastated,” she goes on to write. “There should be a massive infusion of resources to poor and low-income neighborhoods to help residents build local institutions, support social networks, and create social citizenship” (p. 285).
We see abolition democracy as providing a vision of the kind of regime change to which a country like the United States should aspire. It preserves transitional justice’s long-standing idea of democracy and democratization as aims, and is directly concerned with how U.S. practices of imprisonment and policing undermine democratic citizenship, all while being wary of reformist projects that fail to challenge punishment as society’s default response to interpersonal and state violence.
Abolition democracy moreover presents a cohesive vision of how a transition away from the U.S. imprisonment and policing regime and the transitional justice measures of truth and reparation fit together. Allegra M. McLeod (Reference McLeod2018) discusses the contemporary abolitionist movement’s on-the-ground experimentation with alternatives to punishment-focused responses to violence. One example is the movement for reparations as a response to the Chicago police department’s use of torture, where the focus was on truth-telling and the victims’ needs rather than locking up the officers who had sent many innocent Black people to jail. She quotes activist Mariame Kaba:
[T]he reparations ordinance… [is] an abolitionist document… [b]ecause it’s a document that did not rely on the court, prison, and punishment system, to try to envision a more expansive view of justice. So while financial restitution was a part of that package, it also did a whole bunch of other things… [in terms of] rethinking justice for people who have been wronged, survivors of violence… Chicago is the first municipality in history to ever pass a reparations bill for law enforcement violence. So that’s something that other cities are looking at for themselves now, as avenues for justice that are not personal and individual indictments of the police, not calls for cops to be jailed…
(McLeod Reference McLeod2018, p. 1628).This brings us to a related and final point about how abolition democracy and transitional justice—at least on some understandings—fit together. There is a large debate within the transitional justice literature about the extent to which there should be a focus on criminally prosecuting the individual perpetrators of human rights abuses (e.g., Fletcher and Weinstein, Reference Fletcher and Weinstein2002; Leebaw Reference Leebaw2011; Méndez Reference Méndez2001; Orentlicher Reference Orentlicher1991), whether restorative justice and other “therapeutic” methods of accountability wrong victims by letting torturers and other evildoers off the hook (e.g., Moghalu Reference Moghalu, Thakur and Malcontent2004; Wilson Reference Wilson2001; cf. Ame and Alidu, Reference Ame and Alidu2010), whether low-level participants in violence should receive amnesty (e.g., Malamud-Goti Reference Malamud-Goti1990; Mallinder Reference Mallinder, Llewellyn and Philpott2014), whether “individualizing” wrongdoing via criminal trials misrepresents the systemic and collective nature of mass violence (Fletcher and Weinstein, Reference Fletcher and Weinstein2002; Leebaw Reference Leebaw2011), and so on. Abolition democracy takes a firm stand on the issues in this debate, siding with those who advocate pursuing alternatives to criminal punishment, affirming the moral worth of victims through repair rather than retribution, and thinking about violence systematically rather than in individualistic terms. In the context of the present-day United States, these dynamics were on display when Derek Chauvin, the police officer who murdered George Floyd, was found guilty. Journalist Moya Lothian McLean (Reference McLean2021) comments on the novelty of mainstream Democrats calling the criminal conviction “accountability” not “justice”—since justice would require sweeping structural changes aimed at overhauling a sociopolitical system where Black people face endemic, multifaceted violence.
Four years ago, perhaps, Chauvin’s conviction would have led to widespread raucous celebration and numerous politicians declaring that ‘justice has been served’… But we are battered and wiser. It’s not just the abolitionists with decades in the trenches who now recognize that the criminal justice system and imprisonment are not synonymous with ‘justice’—not when those same institutions are responsible for trapping the George Floyds of this world in deadly carceral cycles of criminalization in the first place (McLean Reference McLean2021).
A similar observation can be made about reparations. Suppose that H.R. 40 became law and reparations proposals formulated by an H.R. 40 commission were enacted. This would provide accountability for the federal government’s role as a perpetrator and collaborator in centuries of race-based violence against Black Americans. But unless accompanied by a regime change aimed at disrupting the deadly carceral cycles of criminalization and anti-Blackness, this would not be justice.
Conclusion
An April 2021 report by the International Center for Transitional Justice The Color of Justice: Transitional Justice and the Legacy of Slavery and Racism in the United States (Ladisch and Roccatello, Reference Ladisch and Roccatello2021), cautions against dismissing the United States as a country to which transitional justice is applicable. “A common misconception is that transitional justice can only be applied in a society that is undergoing a significant transition, either at the end of a conflict or during a transfer of power,” the authors of the report write. “However, while such a transition does facilitate efforts to reform institutions and redress past atrocities, what is needed are a political, social, and cultural opening and a public demand for change” (Ladisch and Roccatello, Reference Ladisch and Roccatello2021, p. 2).
Many authors who advocate using the tools of transitional justice to reckon with state-sponsored racial violence and human rights abuses in the United States and other Global North countries aim to persuade those who feel that no such reckoning is needed. They are skeptical of a sharp “emerging” democracy–“established” democracy distinction that too often functions to obfuscate or deny race-based injustice and structural inequalities. But in emphasizing that transitional justice is not only for contexts commonly viewed as transitional, the point often gets lost that justice requires a transition.Footnote 6 As we have argued, the United States is not currently in a transitional moment with regard to its imprisonment and policing regime—the racial justice protests of 2020 notwithstanding, a genuine transformation away from this regime is not yet underway. “It is time,” as Dorothy Roberts (Reference Roberts2007) wrote, “for a third Reconstruction ushered in by a movement that cracks the racial order reinforced by the mass imprisonment of African Americans” (p. 272).
Acknowledgements
The authors thank Colleen Murphy for her comments on an earlier version of the article, as well as the anonymous reviewers for Du Bois Review.