Skip to main content
U-M Ross Business + Impact
U-M Ross Business + Impact
Impact Roadmap

Search

The Rise of Police Unions

Headshots of speakers Ayesha Bell Hardaway and David ThacherOpen to U-M students, faculty, staff, alumni, and community members

Please join us for a winter workshop with Center for Racial Justice Visiting Fellow, Ayesha Bell Hardaway, and Ford School associate professor of public policy and urban planning, David Thacher. The two will discuss how broad societal backlash to Black liberation movements of the 1950s and 1960s granted police unions the power to dictate the policy and culture of municipal policing. The event is open to U-M students, faculty, staff, alumni, and community members.

Lunch from Jerusalem Garden provided. RSVP here.

Details:
  • What: The Rise of Police Unions
  • When: Tuesday, February 3, 12pm-1pm
  • Where: Weill Hall, Classroom 1220, 735 South State Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109
Ayesha Bell Hardaway, JD, is a Professor of Law at Case Western Reserve University where she serves as Director of the Law School’s Social Justice Law Center and its Criminal Defense Clinic. Professor Hardaway also serves as Director of the University’s Social Justice Institute. Her leadership role at the Social Justice Institute began in May 2020 after an appointment by then Provost Ben Vincent III. Professor Hardaway’s research and scholarship interests include the intersection of race with constitutional law, criminal law, policing, and civil litigation. She has written on many topics including reparations, labor law, the Thirteenth Amendment, and policing.

David Thacher is an associate professor of public policy and urban planning at the University of Michigan. His research draws from philosophy, history, and the interpretive social sciences to develop and apply a humanistic approach to policy research. Most of his work has focused on policing, including studies of police order maintenance, the role of knowledge in police innovation, and the transformation of police authority in 19th and 20th century America.