NBN Book of the Day

Joshua Clark Davis, "Police Against the Movement: The Sabotage of the Civil Rights Struggle and the Activists Who Fought Back" (Princeton UP, 2025)

Feb 10, 2026
Joshua Clark Davis, associate professor of history who studies postwar U.S. social movements, unveils how local police waged slow, political warfare against civil rights organizers. He covers surveillance, infiltration, legal and reputational attacks. Multiple short anecdotes and historical pivots show how municipal repression reshaped the struggle and echoes in contemporary protest policing.
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INSIGHT

Local Policing Was Central To Repression

  • Local police surveillance bridged the gap between activists' daily lives and state repression.
  • Joshua Clark Davis shows local forces executed sophisticated, nonphysical harms that crippled movements over time.
INSIGHT

Slow Violence Shapes Movements

  • "Slow violence" names nonphysical harms like surveillance, defamation, and bogus prosecutions.
  • These tactics aimed to intimidate activists and quietly cripple movements without dramatic footage.
INSIGHT

Red Squads Outpaced The FBI Locally

  • Red Squads were local political-intelligence units that predated or outnumbered FBI political agents.
  • Davis argues these units were often closer to communities and more active in repressing activists than federal agents.
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