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Courtwatching is a powerful way to understand how the state punishes—and how we can stand in solidarity with those impacted. We see courtwatching as part of an abolitionist practice. Abolition is a long-term vision and an everyday practice towards a world without criminal courts, policing, and prisons. Courtwatching is a form of mutual aid, resistance, and a method to identify non-reformist reforms that create meaningful change today to dismantle the system rather than entrench it. For anyone interested in getting involved or starting a courtwatch group, we’ve assembled a collection of resources and campaign materials from collective struggles in Germany and beyond that focus on moving beyond the criminal system and criminal courts.

Using your courtwatching documentation to shift power

The everyday workings of criminal courts and the reality of those targeted by criminalization remains hidden to most people who are not directly impacted by state violence and punishment. Revealing what courts do and sharing stories can be a powerful tool to fight copaganda and create counter-narratives against punitive legislation. Across the world many groups courtwatch, and they use their observations differently: some use notes to monitor the impact of criminal justice reforms, some focus on amplifying the voices of people impacted, some use evidence from court observations to support demands and campaign goals. In addition to visiting our case archive, you can look at other group’s work to decide which approach works best for your organization’s strategy.

Reports from courtwatch groups in Germany

Justizwatch has been documenting racism in the justice system since 2014. Although the group is no longer active, you can find minutes and analysis from trials on their blog, with a focus on cases of racist police violence, but also some other criminal cases.

Campaign for Victims of Racist Police Violence (KOP) documents police violence and racial profiling by the police, and engages in solidarity courtwatching, analyzing the coordination and relationships between the police and judiciary.

Solidarity group Justice4Mouhamed documents the trial against the five police officers accused in the killing of Mouhamed Lamine Dramé. Through courtwatching, the initiative sheds light on the racist policing that led to Mouhamed’s death and how racist continuities in court fail to create accountability, allowing police to kill with impunity. You can also listen to Radio Nordpol’s coverage of the trial and hear perspectives from activist courtwatchers.

Initiative 2. Mai in Mannheim fights for justice for Ante P., who was killed in a police operation in 2022. You can find reports on the trial and the voices of relatives on their website.

NSU Watch documents trials against right-wing networks, most prominently the trial against the Nationalsozialistischer Untergrund (NSU) . The NSU-Complex1 is responsible for murdering 10 people between 2000 and 2007, 9 of them out of racist motives. In addition to monitoring criminal trials and government investigative committees on the matter,, an important task of NSU-Watch is to share publicly knowledge about neo-Nazis, the NSU complex, and right-wing terror networks.

Prozess Report documents trials in Germany and Austria to expose right-wing networks, fight against the criminalisation of migration, and shed light on the criminalisation of protest. You can find court reports, and reports on critical documentation of criminal trials on their blog.

Tatort Porz is an anti-racist initiative that mobilized around and documented the trials against CDU politician Hans Josef Bähner who shot at a young man from Porz for racist reasons, seriously injuring and insulting him. You can read their reports and their analysis behind Bähner’s conviction on their website. 

Initiative Oury Jalloh demands justice and accountability for the murder of Oury Jalloh, who was burned in a police cell in Dessau almost 20 years ago. The initiative as well as an international delegation of courtwatchers documented the trial, revealing how courts legitimate racism and how their institutional connection to the police prevents investigation into their systemic abuse of power.

Courtwatching guides and models

So you want to form a courtwatch group or do courtwatching as part of an abolitionist campaign? Here are some guides and resources from courtwatch groups globally to help you find a model that works for your goals and strategy.

Guides in English

Survived and Punished: How to start your own Courtwatch

Beyond Criminal Courts: Community Interventions to Shift Power Inside Criminal Court

Community Justice Exchange: So you want to courtwatch? Guide

Courtwatch London: Courtwatching - A Learning Guide

Tools for the German Context

Justice Collective: Courtwatching Legal Guide

Justice Collective: Courtwatching Training

Reach Out: Über dem Richter gibt es nur den Himmel

Migrationsrat Berlin: Workshopreihe Rassismus und Justiz

Azadi e.V.: Broschüre zur Prozessbeobachtung des 129b-Verfahrens von Yildiz Aktaş

Abolitionist strategy

All over the world, people are organizing against state sanctioned violence, cops, courts and cages. If your group is looking to build a new campaign or a strategy to limit the reach of punitive institutions or you would like to learn from other campaigns about building non-reformist reforms, here are some places to start. These resources focus on mass criminalization and criminal courts. For further topics, check out the additional abolitionist resources below.

Interrupting Criminalization, Project Nia & Critical Resistance: So is this Actually an Abolitionist Proposal or Strategy? A collection of resources to aid in evaluation and reflection

Stevie Wilson and Community Justice Exchange: Beyond courts - study guide

Community Justice Exchange: Dismantling Carceral Debt: A Manifesto on Building Debtor Power

Community Justice Exchange: A Social Media Toolkit for Organizing and Advocacy to End Mass Criminalization and Incarceration

Beyond Criminal Courts: Abolitionist Principles & Campaign Strategies for Prosecutor Organizing

Project NIA: Abolitionist Toolbox - Everyday Resources for a Punishment-Free World

Abolitionist publications in German

In Germany there are many groups and movement traditions that have practiced abolitionist principles in their work. The history and diversity of abolitionist practices exceeds the scope of this resource collection. As a starting point to understand abolitionist movement principles and interconnected analyses, we recommend reading this introduction to the 135th edition of CILIP Magazine in German. Here is a small selection of movement publications against criminalization, police brutality, transformative justice, and racist punishment.

Ihr seid keine Sicherheit: Gegenbericht zum Jahresbericht der Berliner Polizei zu den sogenannten “kriminalitätsbelasteten Orten”

Ihr seid keine Sicherheit: FAQ Abolitionismus

Go Film The Police: A Street Action Guide

Melanie Brazell: What really makes us safe? Toolkit for Activists

Community against Rape and Abuse (CARA): Das Risiko Wagen. Strategien für selbstorganisierte und kollektive Verantwortungsübernahme bei sexualisierter Gewalt

Solidaritätskreis Justice 4 Mouhamed, Defund the Police Dortmund und Justice Collective: Warum gibt es vor Gericht keine Gerechtigkeit?

Justizwatch: Literaturliste

Additional Abolitionist Resources

Here you can find more resources, articles, guides and reports by and for abolitionist movements globally.

Abolitionist Futures

Beautiful trouble

Critical Resistance

Community Resource Hub

Transformative Justice Collective Resource Collection (DE/EN)

Racial Capitalism, Crises, Abolition - Documentation of International Activist Conference 2023

Read More

Articles

DE

Britta Rabe und Michèle Winkler: “Es braucht ein Umdenken, bevor weitere Menschen sterben” - Zur Systematik staatlicher Legitimierung polizeilichen Tötens, Analyse und Kritik

Niels Seibert: Armut und soziale Probleme lassen sich nicht strafrechtlich lösen, Neues Deutschland

Shaïn Morisse, Vanessa E. Thompson: Eine kurze Geschichte des Abolitionismus - Die Bewegung will nicht nur Polizei und Gefängnisse endgültig abschaffen, Neues Deutschland

Simin Jawabreh: Palästina-Proteste: Markierung “gefährlicher” Zonen: Bei der Polizeigewalt gegen propalästinensische Proteste geht es auch um soziale Konflikte, Neues Deutschland

Katharina Schoenes: Rassistische Behördenkette - Erst diskriminiert, dann angezeigt - Betroffene, die sich dagegen wehren wollen, werden von Polizei und Gerichten kriminalisiert, Neues Deutschland

Initiative 2. Mai: Auswertung der Prozessbegleitung zum Tod von Ante P. - eine Zwischenbilanz

EN

Jocelyn Simonson: “We Stopped Him From Going to Prison!” Groups of people are showing up to collectively contest the criminal legal system, Hammer and Hope

Jocelyn Simonson: “We’re Only Here to Watch”How courtwatchers are shifting the power dynamics in criminal courtrooms., The Nation.

Zohra Ahmed: The Demand for Transparency as Non-Reformist Reform, LPE Project

Zohra Ahmed and Rachel Foran: No More Courts - The legal institutions, processes, procedures, and actors implicated in the progression of criminal cases are simply beyond reform. Inquest Decarceral Pathways

Raj Jayadev: People-Powered Defense - Participatory defense allows families and communities to protect their own in courtroom spaces that have long robbed them of power .Inquest Decarceral Pathways

Podcasts and Videos

DE

Simin Jawabreh zu Polizei-Abolitionismus, Strategie, und Bewegung’Abolition needs Class-War’/ ‚Abolition braucht Klassenkampf, Radio Dreyeckland

ManyPod #18: Böllern gegen den Staat? Silvesterkrawalle und rassistische Stereotype

#4 Daniel Loick & Vanessa Eileen Thompson - Online Lecture

On Violence. Paneldiskussion mit Copwatch ffm, Abolish Frontex, Ihr Seid Keine Sicherheit und Women in Exile. 2022

EN

Abolitionismus Special Part 1 | Abolitionist futures: in conversation with Vanessa Thompson and Daniel Loick, The minor constellations podcast

Abolitionismus Special Part II | Justice Collective: in conversation with Mitali Nagrecha and Anthony Obst, The minor constellations podcast






Citations

  • 1

    We refer to the NSU-Complex because the murders of Enver Şimşek, Abdurrahim Özüdoğru, Süleyman Taşköprü, Habil Kılıç, Mehmet Turgut, İsmail Yaşar, Theodoros Boulgarides, Mehmet Kubaşık, Halit Yozgat and Michèle Kiesewetter were not carried out by three Neo-Nazis alone. They were supported by and part of a broader right-wing scene. The German secret service, police departments, inflammatory media, and a justice department unwilling to carry out a full investigation are all also implicated in the injustices. In the absence of justice through the system, the NSU-Tribunals sought to acknowledge harm, elucidate the structural racism, and work towards transformative change.