In the wake of last summer’s uprising against police violence and white supremacy, students, faculty, and staff around the country are organizing to reimagine public safety on their campuses. Joining this growing chorus of voices, the AAUP established a working group of activist chapter leaders and specialist scholars to draft a report exploring the history and role of campus police forces.
The resulting report, available on the AAUP’s website, is the first direct statement from the Association concerning campus policing. It contains a brief history of the development of campus police forces; a position statement detailing how campus police forces exist in tension with the AAUP’s core principles and perpetuate structural forms of racist violence; guidance for AAUP chapters that wish to organize to transform campus safety, including a set of questions that any group of faculty members can use to begin exploring the nature of law enforcement on their campus; and detailed profiles of three chapters currently engaged in campaigns to defund, disarm, or abolish their campus police forces.
As the United States continues to grapple with its racist past and present, the academic profession is uniquely positioned to rethink public safety, and there is no better place to start than our own campuses.