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10. “We Want Justice!”: Police Murder, Mexican American Community Response, and the Chicano Movement

  • Brian D. Behnken
© 2019 Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick

© 2019 Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents vii
  3. Acknowledgments ix
  4. List of Abbreviations: North American Leftist Organizations in the 1970s xi
  5. Introduction: Exploding Limits in the 1970s 1
  6. PART ONE. Insurgency
  7. 1. Improvising on Reality: The Roots of Prison Abolition 21
  8. 2. Sick of the Abuse: Feminist Responses to Sexual Assault, Battering, and Self-Defense 39
  9. 3. “The Struggle Is for Land!”: Race, Territory, and National Liberation 57
  10. 4. Canada’s Other Red Scare: The Anicinabe Park Occupation and Indigenous Decolonization 77
  11. PART TWO. Solidarity
  12. 5. “A Line of Steel”: The Organization of the Sixth Pan-African Congress and the Struggle for International Black Power, 1969–1974 97
  13. 6. How Indigenous Peoples Wound Up at the United Nations 115
  14. 7. “Hit Them Harder”: Leadership, Solidarity, and the Puerto Rican Independence Movement 135
  15. 8. Unorthodox Leninism: Workplace Organizing and Anti-Imperialist Solidarity in the Sojourner Truth Organization 155
  16. PART THREE. Community
  17. 9. Play as World-making: From the Cockettes to the Germs, Gay Liberation to DIY Community Building 177
  18. 10. “We Want Justice!”: Police Murder, Mexican American Community Response, and the Chicano Movement 195
  19. 11. Rising Up: Poor, White, and Angry in the New Left 214
  20. 12. The Movement for a New Society: Consensus, Prefiguration, and Direct Action 231
  21. 13. Hard to Find: Building for Nonviolent Revolution and the Pacifist Underground 250
  22. 14. “The Original Gangster”: The Life and Times of Red Power Activist Madonna Thunder Hawk 267
  23. Notes on Contributors 285
  24. Index 289
The Hidden 1970s
This chapter is in the book The Hidden 1970s
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