by New Statesman: http://www.newstatesman.com/blogs/star-spangled-staggers/2012/06/protest-criminalised-pepper-spray-university
Sometime in July, in a court in Yolo County, California, eleven
students and one professor at the University of California Davis will
stand trial, accused of the “willful” and “malicious” act of protesting
peacefully in front of a bank branch situated on their University
campus.
There has been in recent months a great deal of online coverage of
the brutality of public order policing at Davis. The treatment of the
Davis Dozen, however, promises more longstanding injury. If found
guilty, each faces charges of up to eleven years in prison and $1
million in fines.
The immediate history of the case stretches back to autumn 2008,
when state budget cuts trickled down to the partly state-funded
University of California. The administration of that University
responded by announcing that tuition fees would be increased by 32%,
prompting several months of vocal student protests and campus
occupations, violently suppressed by the state authorities.
As the collapse of the US banking sector caused the State of
California to withdraw its funding for its public Universities, those
same Universities turned to the banking sector for financial support.
On
3 November 2009, just two weeks before riot police would end a student
occupation at UC Berkeley by firing rubber bullets and tear gas at the
students and faculty gathered outside, the University of California
Davis announced on its website a new deal with US Bank, the high street
banking division of U.S Bancor, the fifth largest commercial bank in the
United States.
According to the terms of that deal, US Bank would provide UC Davis
with a campus branch and a variable revenue stream, to be determined by
the University's success in urging its own students to sign up for US
Bank accounts. In return UC Davis would print US Bank logos on all
student ID cards, which from 2010 would be convertible into ATM cards
attached to US Bank accounts.
Just at the moment when, on the campus of
UC Berkeley, riot police were beating up and shooting students who
protested against austerity, fee increases, and their handmaiden, debt,
the management of UC Davis was selling the debt of its own students to
U.S. Bancor, the corporate beneficiary of “austerity.”
The poet and critic Joshua Clover, who has written extensively on
those police actions, is among the twelve who sat down in front of the
Davis branch of US Bank in protest, and who now faces the prospect of
sitting in a cell in the Monroe County Detention Center until 2024, has
argued that “the rise in tuition and indebtedness simply is the
militarization of campus”. These processes, Clover says, “are one and
the same”. The claim concerning police violence will not seem
exaggerated to anyone who has watched the videos on You Tube of the
police action at Davis.
The sit-down protests outside the UC Davis Branch of US Bank, in
which the “UC Davis Dozen” were only a few of many participants, were
not only peaceful; they were, in effect, the active demilitarization of
campus. Their point was to make explicit the connection between
corporate banking, state austerity and an increasingly militaristic
police presence in universities.
US Bank closed its branch in the UC Davis Memorial Union Building in
March. The sit-down protests were a success. That such effective
protest cannot be tolerated is evident from the response of the
University administration and the Yolo County District Attorney.
The
charges against the Davis Dozen have a notable history of service:
“Obstructing movement in a public place” was an indictment invented to
criminalise homelessness in Alabama. The Davis Dozen are to learn - on
behalf of everyone affected by austerity - that protest against the
conditions which lead to homelessness is criminalised by the same
legislation that makes homelessness illegal.
For the bankers,
millionaire University administrators and state functionaries for whom
“revenue” is to be maximised no matter what the cost to the people they
serve, this paradox is no paradox at all.
We are grateful to the Davis Dozen for the example of principled and
eloquent bravery in response to intolerable extensions of police and
corporate power at a time when the poorest are being deterred from
university study by the prospect of unmanageable debt. We,
internationally located artists, critics, and writers, ask that the
Davis Dozen be acquitted of these extraordinarily severe and ignoble
charges, to which they have courageously pleaded “not guilty”.
Signed:
Dr. David Nowell-Smith, Université Paris VII - Denis Diderot, Prof.
Robert Hampson, Royal Holloway, Dr. Daniele Pantano, Edge Hill
University, Olivier Brossard, Maître de conférences, littérature
américaine, Université Paris Est-Marne la Vallée, David Gorin
Jean-Jacques Pouce, Fellow, Internationales Kolleg Morphomata, Genese,
Dynamik, Medialität kultureller Figurationen, Daisy Fried Abigail Lang,
Maître de conférences (Associate Professor), Université Paris-Diderot,
Paris
Michelle Levy Schulz Dominique Pasqualini, Directeur de l'école
EMA Fructidor (School of media and fine arts, Director),
Chalon-sur-Saône, Sean Bonney, Marianne Morris, poet, UC Falmouth,
Keston Sutherland, Reader in English, University of Sussex, Orlando
Reade, University of Cambridge Binh Nguyen, San Diego, CA, Janet Holmes,
Boise State University B, arry Schwabsky, art critic, The Nation,
Robert Kiely, Birkbeck College Kent Johnson John Wilkinson, poet,
Professor of Practice in the Arts, University of Chicago Alvin D.
Greenberg, Boise State University Dr. Alberto Toscano, Department of
Sociology, Goldsmiths Stacy Blint, Disappearing Books Katy Balma,
Fulbright Fellow and Teaching Assistant, University of Connecticut Wendy
Battin, poet and essayist David Lau, Lana Turner Magazine Nick-e
Melville, poet and lecturer at Motherwell College, Scotland Peter
Phillpott, Great Works, modernpoetry.org.uk Patrick Pritchett, Lecturer,
History and Literature, Harvard University Robert Archembeau, Professor
of English, Lake Forest College (Illinois) Rob Holloway, Joseph Kaplan,
Dr. Jeffrey Pethybridge, Susquehanna University Dr. Don Stinson,
Northern Oklahoma College George Cunningham, Hansa Arts Joseph Walton
Hugh McDonnell, University of Amsterdam Megan Kaminski, Creative Writing
Lecturer, University of Kansas Jose A. Alcantara K.E Allen, Lecturer in
English, Comprehensive Studies Program, University of Michigan Allan
Peterson, Gulf Breeze, FL Siobain Walker Dr. Nina Power, Senior Lecturer
in Philosophy, University of Roehampton Francesca Lisette Caitlin
Doherty, University of Cambridge Frances Richard, Barnard College Ryan
Dobran, University of Cambridge Dr. Cathy Wagner, Miami University, OH
John Bloomberg-Rissman, University of California, Riverside Carla
Harryman, Associate Professor of Literature, Eastern Michigan University
Robert Ellen Joel Duncan, University of Notre Dame Jared Schickling,
Adjunct Professor, Humanities Division, Niagara Count Community College
Dr. Ian Patterson, Fellow, Tutor, Director of Studies in English,
Queens' College, University of Cambridge Dr. Lisa Samuels, Associate
Professor, University of Auckland, New Zealand Ian Heames, University od
Cambridge Prof. Alex Davis, University College Cork John Temple
Jonathan B. Highfield Dr. Jennifer Cooke, Lecturer in English,
Loughborough University Dr. Zoe Skoulding, Bangor University Kashka
Georgeson David Grundy, University of Cambridge Luke McMullan Josh
Robison, University of Cambridge Josh Stanley, Phd Student, Yale
University Luke Roberts, Phd candidate, University of Cambridge Gareth
Durasow.
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