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Black Lives Matter: Racialised Policing in the United States
Authors:Jennifer Chernega
Affiliation:1. Department of Sociology, Winona State University, Winona, MN, USAjchernega@winona.edu
Abstract:Abstract

In August 2014, 18 year-old Michael Brown was shot in his hometown of Ferguson, Missouri, launching a series of events that would lead to increased media scrutiny of police interactions with people of colour in the United States. Since then, the news has been filled with accounts of Eric Garner, Tamir Rice, Freddie Gray, Sandra Bland, and more than a dozen other African-Americans who have died at the hands of police. This article examines how the events surrounding Michael Brown’s death shifted the American public’s knowledge of police brutality, creating an opportunity for change. Using social movement theory and a comparison with other historical racial movements in the US, the article analyses how BLM both fits and defies the expectations of a social movement. I conclude with a discussion of some changes that are a direct or indirect result of BLM’s efforts.
Keywords:Social movements  Black Lives Matter  race  social movement theory  police violence  social media  media
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