Dirty Work: Police and Community Relations and the Limits of Liberalism in Postwar Philadelphia/

Schneider, Eric C.

Dirty Work: Police and Community Relations and the Limits of Liberalism in Postwar Philadelphia/ - Sage, 2020. - Vol 46, Issue 5, 2020 ( 961–979 p.).

Police abuse of African Americans was an immediate trigger for the urban uprisings of the 1960s, and civilian review of police actions became a central tenet of civil rights liberalism. The failure of Philadelphia’s Police Advisory Board (PAB), the nation’s first independent civilian review board (1958), to meliorate police–community tensions suggests the limitations of civil rights liberalism: an inability to confront the role of police as “dirty workers,” who performed the unacknowledged but widely demanded function of maintaining racial hierarchy in the postwar city. Working-class African Americans, the most frequent victims of police brutality, came to see civilian review as a charade and rejected the limited vision of civil rights liberals. The PAB’s failure shows that police reform is impossible without a broader commitment to overturning racial hierarchy.

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