Vice Patrol
Cops, Courts, and the Struggle over Urban Gay Life before Stonewall
Vice Patrol
Cops, Courts, and the Struggle over Urban Gay Life before Stonewall
In Vice Patrol, Anna Lvovsky chronicles this painful story, tracing the tactics used to criminalize, profile, and suppress gay life from the 1930s through the 1960s, and the surprising controversies those tactics often inspired in court. Lvovsky shows that the vice squads’ campaigns stood at the center of live debates about not only the law’s treatment of queer people, but also the limits of ethical policing, the authority of experts, and the nature of sexual difference itself—debates that had often unexpected effects on the gay community’s rights and freedoms. Examining those battles, Vice Patrol enriches understandings of the regulation of queer life in the twentieth century and disputes about police power that continue today.
See the author’s website.
360 pages | 16 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2021
History: American History
Law and Legal Studies: Law and Society, Legal History
Sociology: Criminology, Delinquency, Social Control
Reviews
Table of Contents
INTRODUCTION
ONE / When Anyone Can Tell
TWO / Expert Witnesses on Trial
THREE / Plainclothes Decoys and the Limits of Criminal Justice
FOUR / The Rise of Ethnographic Policing
FIVE / Peepholes and Perverts
SIX / The Popular Press and the Gay World
EPILOGUE
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Notes
Index
Awards
The Langum Charitable Trust: David S. Langum, Sr. Prize in American Legal History
Finalist
AHA Committee on Lesbian and Gay History: John Boswell Prize
Honorable Mention
Lambda Literary Foundation: Lambda Literary Awards
Won
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