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Resources in the Connexions Library

Below are resources (books, articles, etc.) in the Connexions Library related to this topic. Clicking on an item's title takes you to its bibliographic page, which typically contains author, publisher, and cataloguing details, an abstract where available, and a link to the full text if available online, as well as links to related topics in the subject index. You can also search for materials through the Title, Author, Subject, Chronological, Dewey, Library of Congress, and Format indexes.
Particularly recommended items are flagged with a red Connexions logo:

  1. Is this what a police state looks like?
    Resource Type: Article/Report/Letter
    First Published: 2010
    The corporate security state is not static – it will keep filling more and more space to the extent that they are allowed to by civil society. The police actions in Toronto are one of those key moments, one that we will look back on as a time when the authoritarian governments we now endure tested our resolve. They know exactly what they are doing. There was no spontaneous “over-reaction.” There were no cops “out of control” – the obvious fact is they were always in control. The decision to allow the Black Bloc to do its destructive work without any intervention at all was strategic. They were assisted in their work by the Black Bloc, some of them agents provocatuers, all of them enemies of social change.
  2. On Handcuffed and Felonious Children
    Resource Type: Article/Report/Letter
    First Published: 2005
    Arresting young children for a crayon drawing, not unlike the games of hangman we once all played, is the ultimate meaning and logic of Zero Tolerance. Zero tolerance involves the application of law in an extreme and uncompromising manner to any activity, violent or not, that is deemed to be anti-social.
  3. Organising Things
    A Guide to Successful Political Action

    Resource Type: Book
    First Published: 1984
    A comprehensive guide to practical political action, packed with information and handy checklists.
  4. The police vs. the law
    Resource Type: Article/Report/Letter
    First Published: 1981
    One of the main differences between a democratic society and a police state is that in a democracy, the police have to obey the law. In a police state, they don't.
  5. Progressives shouldn't be begging the police to take more power
    Resource Type: Article/Report/Letter
    First Published: 1984
    The last thing we need is to hand the police even more power to decide what we are allowed to see or read.
  6. You, Me & the SPP: Trading Democracy for Corporate Rule
    Resource Type: Film/Video
    First Published: 2009
    What do secrecy, police provocateurs, an assault on democracy and infringements on citizens' rights have in common? The Security and Prosperity Partnership.



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Connexions Library

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Indexed by Author, Title, Format, Subject, Dewey number, Library of Congress classification, Year of Publication.
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Copyright Some materials in Connexions are copyrighted by their authors or creators. Others are in the public domain or copyright Connexions. Materials for which Connexions holds the copyright are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution - Non-commercial - No Derivative Works 2.5 Canada License. Indexing and search applications are by Ulli Diemer and Chris DeFreitas.