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Our chapters have halted new prison and jail construction, collaborated with imprisoned organizers, developed the leadership of people leaving jails and prisons, stopped racially motivated policing practices, and fostered projects to develop alternative responses to state and interpersonal violence. Our No New Jails campaigns are featured in the Movement for Black Lives Policy Platform under “End the War on Black People” as model campaigns.

Summary of Historic Impacts with Key Campaign & Project Highlights:

To seed the current prison industrial complex (PIC) abolitionist movement, we hosted 4 national and regional conferences that brought together over ten thousand people. Over the course of 1997-2010, CR organized with hundreds of movement partners for:

  • Critical Resistance: Beyond the Prison Industrial Complex, Berkeley, CA – 1998
  • Critical Resistance East: Northeast Regional Conference, New York City, NY – 2001
  • Critical Resistance South: Southern Regional Conference, New Orleans, LA – 2003
  • CR10: 10th Anniversary Conference and Strategy Session to Abolish the Prison Industrial Complex, Oakland, CA – 2008.

Through advancing a critical understanding of the PIC and abolition, CR has consistently inspired individuals, organizations and communities to take creative and practical steps to build this liberated future. Read more about CR’s history of conference organizing here.

We have achieved many victories against imprisonment, including:

  • We halted California’s 20-year prison building boom through leading the Stop Delano II campaign (1998-2008);
  • We starved the California prison system of millions of dollars intended for new cages and cofounded the now-70-organization-strong Californians United for Responsible Budget (CURB) coalition;
  • We stopped the construction of a new jail in the Bronx with the Community in Unity coalition in New York City (2006-2008) and in 2017 reignited the calls for “No New Jails” in NYC. We then campaigned to halt the proposed NYC jail expansion and shifting common sense that Rikers can be closed without building new jails;
  • We have defied jail expansion in Los Angeles, CA since 2004 and inspired dozens of organizations and thousands of people to take up the call of “No more jails” in LA (2004- 2017 with LA No More Jails coalition; from 2017- 2020 with JusticeLA coalition). In 2019, CR Los Angeles and the JusticeLA coalition stopped women’s jail construction plans in Los Angeles County and succeeded in winning the war of ideas against jail expansion as the men’s replacement mental health jail plan (CCTF) was shifted to instead build a mental health treatment facility. The struggle continues in Los Angeles against the construction of this jail-by-another-name, as we fight against imprisonment in LA County Jail system and criminalization, and for decentralized community care resources;
  • We halted jail expansion in San Francisco, CA for 7 years with the No New SF Jail Coalition and successfully closed the seismically unsafe jail at 850 Bryant in downtown San Francisco in 2020.

We’ve specifically built power and campaigns with imprisoned people:

  • With imprisoned people’s loved ones, we built the Amnesty for Survivors of Hurricane Katrina campaign in New Orleans to identify, expose and stop the use of imprisonment, policing and surveillance as the state’s response to natural and unnatural disasters.
  • We founded The Abolitionist newspaper, a bilingual political education and organizing publication that reaches thousands of imprisoned people across the US for free;
  • We advanced the call to abolish solitary confinement in California and run media, outreach and legislative strategies for the 30,000-prisoner strong California Prisoner Hunger Strikes with Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity coalition and the Short Corridor Collective at Pelican Bay (2011-2015), leading to the international recognition of solitary confinement as torture and a massive reduction of its use in California;
  • Permanently closed a seismically unfit jail – County Jail 4 – in downtown San Francisco with No New SF Jail Coalition (2020), while also defeating numerous other plans for the city and county of San Francisco to expand caging and criminalization in the Bay Area (2013-2020).

We’ve eroded the power of policing and won concrete victories:

  • We eliminated racist gang injunctions in Oakland, CA with the Stop the Injunctions Coalition (STIC), modeling the first complete grassroots victory against this policy in the country (2010-2015);
  • With the Stop Urban Shield coalition, we defeated Urban Shield in a defunding campaign, the largest SWAT team training and weapons expo in the world (2013-2019);
  • We founded the Oakland Power Projects to increase people’s wellbeing and decrease reliance on law enforcement. As part of this, we supported the development of an Anti-Policing Healthworkers network and the Know Your Options healthcare series that empower people to deescalate everyday emergency situations and reduce engagement with cops when seeking healthcare.
  • From 2016-2019 we collaborated with public health workers to pass the “Law Enforcement is a Public Health Issue” through the 25,000-person strong national American Public Health Association.
  • We cut proposed police expansions in Portland, OR in half with through our Care Not Cops campaign, stopping the addition of over 35 new police positions, saving Portlanders $15 million, and disbanding Portland’s racist gang policing unit (2017-2020);