Andrea Ritchie
American activist and author From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Andrea J. Ritchie is a writer, lawyer, and activist for women of color, especially LGBTQ women of color, who have been victims of police violence.[1][2] She is the author of Invisible No More, a history of state violence against women of color, and co-author of No More Police: A Case for Abolition with Mariame Kaba.
Andrea Ritchie | |
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![]() Ritchie in 2018 | |
Alma mater | Cornell University Howard University (JD) |
Occupation(s) | Author, lawyer, activist |
Notable work | Invisible No More |
Education
Ritchie attended Cornell University and Howard University School of Law.[3] She clerked for Judge Emmet G. Sullivan on the United States District Court for the District of Columbia.[4]
Career
Summarize
Perspective
Ritchie is a Researcher-in-Residence at the Social Justice Institute at the Barnard Center for Research on Women.[5] Her writing has appeared in The New York Times, Teen Vogue, and Essence.[6][7][8] In 2018, Ritchie co-authored the report SayHerName: Police Violence against Black Women and Women of Color with Kimberlé Crenshaw and the African American Policy Forum (Haymarket 2016).[9] In 2022 she published No More Police: A Case for Abolition which she co-authored with Mariame Kaba. In No More Police she provides some details on events in her life that made her a prison and police abolitionist, lays out arguments for why policing should be abolished, and discusses methods of creating safety without police.[10]
Invisible No More
In 2017, Ritchie published Invisible No More: Police Violence Against Black Women and Women of Color.[1][11] In it, she gives a history of often-obscured state violence against women of color in the United States, beginning in the colonial period and continuing through the present, discussing how the historical precedent established current conditions.[12] She ties practices in colonialism, slavery and Jim Crow to contemporary policing frameworks including broken windows policing and the wars on drugs, immigration, and terror.[13] In a review for Policing and Society, Robert Nicewarner found four major contributions Ritchie made with the book: demonstrating the historically contingent and structural nature of police violence against women of color; the development of “mixed” methodology interweaving statistics and personal stories; demonstrating the insufficiency of police response to violence against women of color; and demonstrating the “dire need to resist and reform” these issues.[13]
Bibliography
- No More Police: A Case of Abolition, co-authored with Mariame Kaba, The New Press, 2022. ISBN 9781620977323
- Invisible No More: Police Violence Against Black Women and Women of Color, Beacon Press, 2017. ISBN 9780807088982
- Queer (In)Justice: The Criminalization of LGBT People in the United States, co-authored with Joey Mogul and Kay Whitlock, Beacon Press, 2012. ISBN 9780807051153
References
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