Policing the Campus: Academic Repression, Surveillance, and the Occupy Movement

Anthony J. Nocella, David Gabbard

Research output: Book/ReportBook

Abstract

With the rise of the corporate university and the academic industrial complex, colleges and universities throughout the United States are becoming monitored, armed, gated, and contracted out in the name of security. Policing the Campus is a collection of essays by activist academics and campus organizers from a variety of fields and movements. The book fully explores how higher education has entered a state of academic repression. In this new Occupy Wall Street era, higher education mirrors the problems that plague urban schools in poor communities, including metal detectors, random locker searches, drug-sniffing police dogs, in-class arrests, and security guards at every major entrance. Policing the Campus is a wake-up call to protect higher education as a bastion of free thought, strategy, and challenge for the 99%, and not preserve it as the privilege of the elite 1%.

Original languageAmerican English
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2013

EGS Disciplines

  • Educational Sociology
  • Higher Education
  • Politics and Social Change

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