With a focus on police unions in the United States and Canada, this article argues that the construction of 'blue solidarity', including through recent Blue Lives Matter campaigns, serves to repress racial justice movements that challenge police authority, acts as a counter to broader working class resistance to austerity and contributes to rising right-wing populism. Specifically, the article develops a case study analysis of Blue Lives Matter campaigns in North America to argue that police unions construct forms of 'blue solidarity' that produce divisions with other labour and social movements and contribute to a privileged status of their own members vis-a-vis the working class more generally. As part of this process, police unions support tactics that reproduce racialised 'othering' and that stigmatise and discriminate against racialised workers and communities. The article concludes by arguing that organised labour should maintain a critical distance from police unions

DOI:
Issue Areas
- Crime and Safety
- Race and Ethnicity
Publishers
- Sage Journals
- Work, Employment and Society
Doc Type
- Report/Whitepaper
Language
- English
Geography
- North America / Canada
- North America / United States
Copyright
- Copyright 2020 by Sage Journals. All rights reserved.