A YEAR IN REVIEW

TAVP's 2020 End-of-Year Report

Over the course of 2020, Texas After Violence Project grew, and evolved, to meet the needs of our community. At the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, we recognized that the prison industrial complex would fail to protect the people living under its control, and that the violence of its neglect and indifference would lead to incalculable suffering and death.

Meanwhile, as Black Lives Matter uprisings spread in towns and cities across the US this summer in response to the rampant police killings of Black and brown people, we knew the importance of documenting stories of protest and resistance, in order to create an irrefutable record of police brutality and political negligence. From our digital collection, Sheltering Justice, to our collaborations with organizations like WITNESS and Mourning Our Losses, TAVP has joined an informal network of organizations around the country, all striving to meet this moment with resources, support, and space for reflection as well rage, for collective grief as well as community care.

We believe our work has never been more important than it is now, as more and more people begin to take a stand against the violence that threads throughout our society. As this movement against state violence grows, it’s critical it is shaped and informed by those who are most impacted by the failures of the current system. The work of Texas After Violence Project helps make that possible by creating space for people to tell their personal stories, as they want them to be told.