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Hunger Strikes and the Incarcerated Credible Messenger: A Lived Perspective on Solidarity, Labeling, and Resistance in California Prisons

Critical Criminology

Published online on

Abstract

{"p"=>"The prison hunger strikes of 2011 and 2013 in California were among the most coordinated and politically conscious acts of prisoner resistance in U.S. history. As a survivor and participant in both strikes while confined in the general population yard, I draw from lived experience and critical criminological theory to examine how incarcerated people transformed their bodies into instruments of political expression. The California gang validation system operates as a racialized regime of domination, criminalizing culture itself; yet, through collective refusal and cross-racial solidarity, the hunger strikes dismantled its logic from within. From this crucible emerged the incarcerated credible messenger—those who, forged in repression, learned to turn survival into pedagogy and resistance into transformation. Upon release, we carried that credibility back to our neighborhoods, reshaping the role of the credible messenger as one rooted in radical accountability and liberation rather than institutional compliance. This paper exposes how state agencies have co-opted the credible messenger model, converting it from grassroots insurgency to bureaucratic management, and argues for its reclamation as a revolutionary practice grounded in lived struggle, consciousness-building, and collective liberation."}