Policing the Open Road [Rerelease]
Podcast |
The War on Cars
Media Type |
audio
Categories Via RSS |
News
News Commentary
Society & Culture
Publication Date |
Aug 17, 2020
Episode Duration |
00:35:34

[This episode was originally released on October 31st, 2019. We're re-releasing it as an end-of-summer extra for new listeners and will be back with new episodes in September.]

For a century, the automobile has been sold to Americans as the ultimate freedom machine. In her groundbreaking new book, “Policing the Open Road,” historian and legal scholar Sarah Seo explodes that myth. Seo shows how modern policing evolved in lockstep with the development of the car. And that rather than giving Americans greater freedom, the massive body of traffic law required to facilitate mass motoring helped to establish a kind of automotive police state. Is a car a private, personal space deserving Fourth Amendment protection from “unreasonable searches and seizures?” Or is a car something else entirely? It’s a question that courts have struggled with for decades, ultimately leaving it up to the police to use their own discretion, often with horrifying results, especially for minorities. In this revelatory conversation with TWOC co-host Aaron Naparstek, Seo offers an entirely new way of looking at the impact of the automobile on American life, law and culture.

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SHOW NOTES: 

Buy Sarah Seo’s book, “Policing the Open Road: How Cars Transformed American Freedom.”

Follow Sarah Seo on Twitter and visit her seo.com/">website.

Was the Automotive Era a Terrible Mistake? By Nathan Heller. (The New Yorker)

How Cars Transformed Policing (Boston Review)

On the Road Police Power Has Few Limits (The Atlantic)

Stopped, Ticketed, Fined: The Pitfalls of Driving While Black in Ferguson (bland-video-brian-encinia.html">New York Times)

Why we can — and must — create a fairer system of traffic enforcement. Its discretionary nature has left it ripe for abuse (Washington Post)

Driving (and walking) While Black: bland-video-brian-encinia.html"> Sandra Bland, Philando Castile, Michael Brown and The Ferguson Report.

This episode was edited by Jaime Kaiser and recorded at Great City Post and the Brooklyn Podcasting Studio.

Find us on Twitter: @TheWarOnCars, Aaron Naparstek @Naparstek, Doug Gordon @BrooklynSpoke, Sarah Goodyear @buttermilk1

Drop us a line: thewaroncars@gmail.com

https://thewaroncars.org

 

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