Works by Angela Davis
- “Racism, Birth Control and Reproductive Rights” in Women, Race and Class, 1981
- “Race and Criminalization; Black Americans and the Punishment Industry” in The House that Race Built, ed. Wahneema Lubiano, 1997
- “Political Prisoners, Prisons and Black Liberation”, originally from If They Come in the Morning: Voices of Resistance, ed. Angela Davis & Betty Aptheker, 1971
- “Rape, Racism and the Myth of the Black Rapist” in Women, Race and Class, 1981
- “I Used to be Your Sweet Mama: Ideology, Sexuality and Domesticity” in Blues Legacies and Black Feminism: Gertrude “Ma” Rainey, Bessie Smith, and Billie Holiday, 1999
- “From the Prison of Slavery to the Slavery of Prison: Frederick Douglass and the Convict Lease System” in The Angela Y. Davis Reader, ed. Joy James, 1998
- Angela Davis: An Autobiography, 1974 [reprinted in 1988]
- “Racialized Punishment and Prison Abolition” in The Angela Y. Davis Reader, ed. Joy James, 1998
- “Reflections on the Black Woman’s Role in the Community of Slaves” in The Massachusetts Review , 1972
- “Globalism and the Prison-Industrial Complex: An Interview with Angela Davis”, conducted by Avery F. Gordon, 1999
- “Class and Race in the Early Women’s Rights Campaign” in Women, Race and Class, 1981
- Are Prisons Obsolete, 2003
- Alternatively, all of this can be found in my Angela Davis dropbox