Race and Class
Volume 57, Issue 1, 2015, Pages 39-50

Migrant media and the road to injustice (Article)

Fero K.*
  • a Coventry University and Regents London University, United Kingdom

Abstract

One of the most significant, independent, political films made in the UK was Injustice – about black deaths in custody from 1993–1999. Despite attempts by the police to suppress the film and refusal by television to show it, it was eventually screened in hundreds of community venues, cinemas and won many awards at film festivals. Ultimately it was viewed by the Attorney General, who then called for a review of decision-making over prosecutions. A founder of Migrant Media, the radical documentary group which made the film, discusses how the group formed, its vision of filmmaking, its struggles with officialdom, and how it helped form community resistance models including the United Families and Friends Campaign on deaths in custody. This article is based on an interview for the book Dying for Justice (IRR, 2015) which carried an abridged version. It provides a unique insider perspective on the role of contemporary, radical, community-embedded filmmaking. © 2015 Institute of Race Relations.

Author Keywords

injustice Police complaints authority Agence Im’Média Joy gardner Channel 4 TV Deaths in custody United families and friends campaign Migrant media

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84931035859&doi=10.1177%2f0306396815581783&partnerID=40&md5=a9154f944dc36e39b6ad5762d1d1a426

DOI: 10.1177/0306396815581783
ISSN: 03063968
Original Language: English