Black Community Safety: Document, Map, and Demand Change
Black Community Safety: Document, Map, and Demand Change
Community safety for Black Americans has never meant the same thing as "more police." It means knowing what is happening in your neighborhood, having tools to document it, and converting that evidence into policy wins that actually stick.
AASS — the African American Safety Society — is built around three moves: report, map, and demand.
Report: make the incident visible
Most racial harm never becomes a statistic. People absorb it, tell friends, and move on. Community incident reporting gives that experience a public address — city by city, without requiring an account or a police report.
Map: prove it is not random
One story is an anecdote. Twenty stories in the same metro is a pattern. The AASS incident map groups submissions geographically so residents, journalists, and advocates can see where harm concentrates.
Demand: fight for something winnable
Documentation without a policy target burns people out. That is why AASS publishes original analysis like The Winnable Demand — concrete fights (free college and tax relief for descendants of American slavery) instead of open-ended debates the country avoids forever.
How this differs from traditional safety apps
Commercial safety tools often focus on tickets, warrants, or emergency response. AASS focuses on racial harm and collective advocacy — the layer those products do not cover.
Our parent company, Global Ticket Pay, handles court records and citation monitoring. AASS handles the community safety and advocacy layer those records do not touch.
What you can do today
1. Report an incident if something happened in your area
2. Browse the map to see what others have documented
3. Read the essay on winnable demands for Black America
4. Subscribe to insights for ongoing analysis
Black community safety is not passive. It is built report by report, city by city, demand by demand.
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