Tommie Shelby explore les questions complexes d'injustice raciale, de solidarité sociale et de dissidence politique. Son œuvre examine les fondements philosophiques de l'expérience noire, offrant des aperçus profonds sur les inégalités structurelles qui façonnent la société américaine. Les analyses de Shelby sont incisives, incitant les lecteurs à considérer à la fois l'histoire et le présent de la dissidence et des mouvements de réforme noirs.
On the 50th anniversary of Martin Luther King, Jr.'s, assassination, his
political thought remains underappreciated. Tommie Shelby and Brandon Terry,
along with a cast of distinguished contributors, engage critically with King's
understudied writings on a wide range of compelling, challenging topics and
rethink the legacy of this towering figure.
Technology and the loss of manufacturing jobs have many worried about future mass unemployment. It is in this context that basic income, a government cash grant given unconditionally to all, has gained support from a surprising range of advocates, from Silicon Valley to labor. Our contributors explore basic income's merits, not only as a salve for financial precarity, but as a path toward racial justice and equality. Others, more skeptical, see danger in a basic income designed without attention to workers' power and the quality of work. Together they offer a nuanced debate about what it will take to tackle inequality and what kind of future we should aim to create.
For Tommie Shelby, the persistence of ghettos raises many thorny questions of
morality, and he offers practical answers framed in terms of what justice
requires of government and its citizens. His social vision and political
ethics calls for putting the abolition of ghettos at the center of reform.
"An incisive and sympathetic examination of the case for ending the practice of imprisonment. Despite its omnipresence and long history, imprisonment is a deeply troubling practice. In the United States and elsewhere, prison conditions are inhumane, prisoners are treated without dignity, and sentences are extremely harsh. Mass incarceration and its devastating impact on black communities have been widely condemned as neoslavery or "the new Jim Crow." Can the practice of imprisonment be reformed, or does justice require it to be ended altogether? In The Idea of Prison Abolition, Tommie Shelby examines the abolitionist case against prisons and its formidable challenge to would-be prison reformers. Philosophers have long theorized punishment and its justifications, but they haven't paid enough attention to incarceration or its related problems in societies structured by racial and economic injustice. Taking up this urgent topic, Shelby argues that prisons, once reformed and under the right circumstances, can be legitimate and effective tools of crime control. Yet he draws on insights from black radicals and leading prison abolitionists, especially Angela Davis, to argue that we should dramatically decrease imprisonment and think beyond bars when responding to the problem of crime. While a world without prisons might be utopian, The Idea of Prison Abolition makes the case that we can make meaningful progress toward this ideal by abolishing the structural injustices that too often lead to crime and its harmful consequences." --book jacket