In Fight the Power: Law and Policy Through Hip-Hop Songs, contributors provide perspectives on hip-hop artists’ critiques of laws, policies, gender norms, and the economic system in the United States. Contributors address different topics and analyse song lyrics addressing injustices and living conditions in the United States. These critiques discuss universal topics that are relevant to an international audience of feminist legal scholars as other nations have had high-profile incidents of deaths in police custody. In the aftermath of George Floyd’s death in police custody in 2020, protests occurred around the world in places such as Colombia, the United Kingdom, and France (Silverstein 2021). In the introduction, Parks and Cooper provide a brief history of hip-hop and a synopsis of the chapters. Throughout, contributors analyse hip-hop songs as these songs apply to law and policy, as well as protests, including the protests that occurred in summer 2020.

Citation
Latia Ward, Gregory S. Parks and Frank Rudy Cooper (eds): Fight the Power: Law and Policy Through Hip-Hop Songs (reviewing Gregory S. Parks and Frank Rudy Cooper, Fight the Power: Law and Policy Through Hip-Hop Songs) 31 Feminist Legal Studies 401–403 (2023).