
New Books in History Joshua Clark Davis, "Police Against the Movement: The Sabotage of the Civil Rights Struggle and the Activists Who Fought Back" (Princeton UP, 2025)
Oct 28, 2025
Joshua Clark Davis, an Associate Professor of U.S. history, explores the overlooked resistance of civil rights activists to police violence in his new book. He reveals how groups like CORE and SNCC fought back against surveillance and repression, illustrating their struggles through personal stories. Davis expands the concept of police violence to include economic and legal tactics that aimed to undermine movements. He also sheds light on local police strategies, such as red squads, and the impact of infiltrators on the civil rights struggle.
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Use Diverse Archives Strategically
- Seek archival variety: police files, activist records, newspapers, and federal court files for full context.
- Prioritize cities with preserved intelligence files and mayoral or federal records to document surveillance.
Danville Modeled Subtle Repression
- Danville, VA refined a gentler but more effective model of political policing: legal repression and surveillance over televised brutality.
- Officials aimed to neutralize movements discreetly and taught those methods nationally.
White LAPD Officer Turned Activist
- Michael "Mike" Hannon was a white LAPD officer who sincerely joined CORE and faced department retaliation.
- His son Sean entrusted Joshua Davis with personal papers that illuminated internal abuse and hate mail.





