Introduction
Manifesto of the Abolition Journal
Dis-Organizing Prisons and Building Together, Inside/Outside—Stevie Wilson
It Has to Burn Before It Can Grow: An Interview with Amanda Priebe—Brooke Lober
Burn It Down: Abolition, Insurgent Political Praxis, and the Destruction of Decency—Katherine, Kelly, and Abraham
Already Something More: Heteropatriarchy and the Limitations of Rights, Inclusion, and the Universal—J Sebastian
Democracy Against Representation: A Radical Realist View—Paul Raekstad
A Family Like Mine—Shana L. Redmond
Abuse Thrives on Silence: The #VaughnRebellion in Context—Kim Wilson
From the Vaughn Uprising: “For a Safer, More Secure, and More Humane Prison.” On Behalf of the Prisoners at James T. Vaughn Correctional Center
Aggrieved Whiteness: White Identity Politics and Modern American Racial Formation—Mike King
Abolitionist Democracy: Fear, Loathing, and Violence in the 2016 Campaign—Joy James
The Pitfalls of White Liberal Panic—Dylan Rodríguez
As the US Oligarchy Expands Its War, Middle Class White People Must Take a Side—Robert Nichols
Notes on Photography, Power, and Insurgent Looks—Stefanie Fock
We Can Be Here Another Five Hundred Years: A Critical Reflection on Shiri Pasternak’s Grounded Authority—Nick Estes
How Does State Sovereignty Matter?—Shiri Pasternak’s Response to Nick Estes
Zionism and Native American Studies—Steven Salaita
I Will Kiss the Ground of My Cell… As It Is Part of My Homeland, Spatial Politics and Gender: Israel’s Carcerality of Palestinian Women—Nicole Printy
Is Marxism Relevant? Some Uses and Misuses—David Gilbert, political prisoner.
Meeting Mumia Abu-Jamal: The Most Well-Known Political Prisoner in the US—Robyn C. Spencer
Art by: Heidi Sincuba, Amanda Priebe, Nilda Brooklyn and Adrien Leavitt, Priti Gulati Cox, Jesus Barraza and Melanie Cervantes, and Jess X. Snow