Published February 20, 2025 | Version v1
Journal article Open

The Survival Line: A Case Study in Anti-Carceral Community-Based Hotline Work

  • 1. University of Chicago

Description

Community members seeking alternatives to policing have played a substantive role in promoting safety and responding to harm for decades. The Survival Line was formed as a volunteer-run hotline to respond to community members' concerns about neighborhood crime or police misconduct. It was established in the summer of 1970 as a mechanism for gathering data while also referring callers to community resources like pro bono attorneys and low-cost social services. It ran as a 24/7 hotline staffed entirely by volunteers from the Action for Survival coalition, a group of community-based organizations, which included the Chicago Urban League. Using historical analytic methods, this study asks the following: what function did this citizen-run hotline serve in 1970s Chicago? This study mobilizes archival research methods to analyze call records, meeting minutes, publicity materials, and internal memos from the Chicago Urban League and its Survival Line archives. This archival analysis found that the Survival Line served multiple functions; it was a non-state response to urban crises, a vehicle for Black solidarity, and a mechanism for gathering data on crime and police misconduct in the city. By functioning as an alternative to policing and state responses to crime, a vehicle for Black neighborhood solidarity, and a data collection mechanism, the Survival Line was at the core of an impactful micropolitical intervention upon urban crises in 1970s Chicago. As a historical example of community-driven violence and crisis response, this hotline has implications for contemporary social work—specifically for direct practice, community organizing, program design and evaluation, and community-based participatory research.

Data availability

The data presented and analyzed in this study are available at the University of Illinois-Chicago library and archives, within the Chicago Urban League collection.

Files

Survival-Line.pdf

Files (253.4 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:ee0451f66fa09ceb2c3d7c7645a64a04
253.4 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.3390/socsci14030121
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:14611

Funding

University of Chicago
Doctoral Fellowship
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Health Policy Research Scholars Fellowship

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Crown Family School of Social Work, Policy, and Practice
Department(s)
Crown Family School of Social Work, Policy, and Practice Research Publications