You can find information about all past conferences here.
The Students Against Policing committee is pushing for Princeton University to defund and reform its private police force (PSAFE) and invest in a new safety model that doesn't involve policing or those with the power of arrest.
The Students Against Policing committee is pushing for Princeton University to defund and reform its private police force (PSAFE) and invest in a new safety model that doesn't involve policing or those with the power of arrest.
About half of those employed by PSAFE are sworn police officers, detectives, sergeants, etc., who hold the same powers as municipal or state police and whose policing powers extend to Princeton township. Yet, as private employees, PSAFE officers are only accountable to the University administration, which is not beholden to the interests of the Princeton municipal community. In April 2019, a campus officer at Yale shot a community member while investigating a reported armed robbery. The Yale officer was suspended for 30 days, and later returned to work as an administrator. While we do not know if a similar abuse of power has happened at Princeton yet, the jurisdiction of our armed P-Safe officers also extends to the surrounding community, creating the conditions that allow for such violent interactions with community members. As long as the University employs sworn police officers with similar authority to detain and use force against our students, staff, and local community as local police officers, the University is not only complicit in, but actively contributing to the racist institution of policing in this country.
February 20, 2025
Amidst the uptick of scrutinous surveillance methods on Princeton's campus, SPEAR’s PSAP Committee hosted "Safety is not Surveillance: Addressing Carceral Capture as a Response to Community Needs," a panel centered around spreading awareness and facilitating dialogue about alternatives to surveillance methods, implications of intrusive surveillance and carceral capture methods, AI surveillance (such as ShotSpotter), and mitigating police violence in response to surveillance methods. The panel consisted of speakers that ranged from social justice activists, attorneys at the ACLU of New Jersey, professors at Princeton, and more, and was an engaging and insightful conversation that shed light on the future of surveillance and police violence on Princeton's campus and beyond.
The Reentry Committee partners with New Jersey Prison Justice Watch and the American Reentry Initiative, along with other universities and community partners. We engage in advocacy for degree programs for formerly incarcerated folks in NJ and facilitate other kinds of support. This semester, Reentry will be leading a course titled “Radical Imagination and the Political Consciousness” aimed at justice-impacted folks considering higher education. Sign bit.ly/spearclass. This past year, we worked on the Welcome Home Initiative, which supports NJ residents returning home from incarceration. This initiative was primarily established to support the passage of public health legislation that led to the release of over 2,000 NJ residents. We staffed a hotline for returning citizens, compiled a network of distribution centers and county-specific resources, and contacted partners to collect in-kind donations, such as toiletries, PPE, and cell phones. Going forward, we will continue to work on the Welcome Home Initiative and look for more opportunities to support reentry in New Jersey.
The Reentry Committee partners with New Jersey Prison Justice Watch and the American Reentry Initiative, along with other universities and community partners. We engage in advocacy for degree programs for formerly incarcerated folks in NJ and facilitate other kinds of support. This semester, Reentry will be leading a course titled “Radical Imagination and the Political Consciousness” aimed at justice-impacted folks considering higher education. Sign bit.ly/spearclass. This past year, we worked on the Welcome Home Initiative, which supports NJ residents returning home from incarceration. This initiative was primarily established to support the passage of public health legislation that led to the release of over 2,000 NJ residents. We staffed a hotline for returning citizens, compiled a network of distribution centers and county-specific resources, and contacted partners to collect in-kind donations, such as toiletries, PPE, and cell phones. Going forward, we will continue to work on the Welcome Home Initiative and look for more opportunities to support reentry in New Jersey.