Kevin Revier is Assistant Professor in the Sociology/Anthropology Department at SUNY Cortland.
""Kevin Revier's insightful ethnographic case study combined with an abolitionist epistemology compels us to demand alternatives to incarceration that aren't rooted in treatment modalities that reproduce the logics and practices of punishment and the erasure of structural explanations. He shows in excruciating detail how drug courts and jail treatment programs are part of the problem, not the solution, and lays out a vision for a more just path forward."" (Alex Vitale, author of The End of Policing) ""Policing Pain is a bold, nuanced, and incisive chronicle of the perilous contradictions of making cops, judges, prison wardens and guards 'care' for people who use drugs."" (Nancy D. Campbell, author of OD: Naloxone and the Politics of Overdose) ""Policing Pain exposes how policing, courts, and jails have absorbed the language of care while upholding racialized control and punishment. Through abolitionist analysis and rich ethnography, Revier reveals how carceral power has adapted, medicalized, and deepened its reach. This is a vital book for anyone seeking to understand the entwined histories of racial capitalism, drug prohibition, and the urgent need for abolitionist care."" (Kerwin Kaye, author of Enforcing Freedom: Drug Courts, Therapeutic Communities, and the Intimacies of the State) ""Revier wisely reminds us how carceral societies treat addiction like a problem to be policed, rather than a need for healing justice and harm reduction. Meticulously researched, written with passion and suffused with the author's vivid abolitionist imagination, Policing Pain makes for compulsory reading for anyone interested in how states arrest their way out of the crises they create and why freedom dreaming and social justice seeking are the only humane response."" (Lambros Fatsis, co-author of Policing the Pandemic: How Public Health Becomes Public Order) ""In his intimate portrait of yet another 'drug crisis,' Revier shows that despite reports of its demise, the drug war is indeed alive and well. While attentive to the pain and suffering of those left in the drug war's wake, Revier charts a hopeful path forward. Not only a vivid account of the present, Policing Pain is essential reading for the crises to come."" (Travis Linnemann, author of The Horror of Police)