
Contents
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From Segregated Vice to Racial Segregation From Segregated Vice to Racial Segregation
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Violent Police Neglect Black Women Violent Police Neglect Black Women
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Fallout from Prohibition: The Making of “Crime-Fighting” Policing Fallout from Prohibition: The Making of “Crime-Fighting” Policing
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3 Los Angeles: Land of the White Hunter: Legal Liberalism, Police Professionalism, and Black Protest
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1 Making the Modern City: Sexual Policing and Black Segregation from Prohibition to the Great Depression
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Published:March 2022
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Abstract
The shutdown of red-light districts between the Progressive era and the Depression was in fact a police-driven relocation of vice to Black neighborhoods. Police deployed their discretionary power to channel the flow of an urban faucet, permitting the inundation of white men into Black neighborhoods, aggressively policing white women’s sociability, and erratically targeting Black women for morals offenses. Police had helped to erect Black vice districts and during Prohibition they enforced morals violations (or withheld enforcement for a fee) on the same streets, creating a doubled segregation: segregated vice and racially segregated Black residents. This transformation set the twentieth-century log and practice of urban policing in motion. The enduring preoccupation with white female purity had an impact on the ways that Black women were policed. The criminalization of white women, especially those engaging in interracial socialization, brought the full weight of the Progressive-era criminal apparatus to bear on Black neighborhoods through the Depression.
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