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We sat down with Leslie Kern (@LellyK)--feminist geographer, academic, and author of Feminist City: Claiming Space in a Man-Made World--to discuss what it means that "a feminist city is a police free city," in the wake of a slew of misogynistic, racist, and otherwise generally brutal actions attributed to London's finest. First, though, we take a look with some satisfaction at Deliveroo's shoddy IPO performance.

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Comments

Anonymous

Here in Toronto the police force was formed from gangs of Orangemen tasked with terrorizing Irish Catholics.

Anonymous

One of my friend's parents works within the NHS as part of a team aiming to break the cycle of sexual violence. The clinical psychologists work with patients who are worried they are at risk of offending, or directly with patients who are currently incacerated. People who suffered from sexual abuse in their childhood often go on to be offenders when they are older, continuing the cycle. By the point they are prosecuted, it is too late, the trauma caused to the victim puts them at increased risk of offending, therefore continuing the cycle. She is campaigning for expansion of the service to the wider public and why we need to see crime as a complex web of interconnected issues, with push and pull factors. Personally, I don't see a society without police. But policing should be an incidental tool in a much larger toolkit in reducing the number of victims of crime, that should include Forensic Psychology, Drug Decriminalisation/Legalisation, Creating safer roads that discourage dangerous driving, Expanded Mental Health services, social safety nets, education and opportunities, especially in poor areas. Without addressing these issues, the forever-war continues, with no end in sight.