Abstract

Scholars have overlooked systemic reform injunctions as potent tools to challenge and combat discriminatory and unconstitutional police practices. Recent events and an infusion of funding from major philanthropy and private sources promise an increase in injunctive suits challenging department-wide unconstitutional and discriminatory police practices. I propose formalized community involvement in the creation, implementation and evaluation of injunctive remedial processes to improve solution generation and popularize policing public law litigation. The dominant policing theories offering community involvement — community policing and procedural justice — have limited utility at addressing long-term tensions between the police and Black or Brown neighborhoods. My proposed remedy, as part of a larger injunction, aims to shift power from the police to the policed and draws from democratic theory.

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