Brenden Beck

Student Fellow

Brenden Beck is a PhD candidate in sociology at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. He is interested in how the carceral state responds to socio-spatial changes and economic restructuring. His dissertation analyzes low-level policing in the contexts of suburbanization, gentrification, and fiscal crises.


Collected Work


“Policing Gentrification: Stops and Low-Level Arrests during Demographic Change and Real Estate Reinvestment”

Does low-level policing increase during gentrification? If so, are police responding to increased crime, increased demand by new residents, or are they attempting to “clean up” neighborhoods marked for economic redevelopment? To address these questions, this article constructs a longitudinal dataset of New York City neighborhoods from 2009 to 2015. I compile data on neighborhoods’ demographics, street stops, low–level arrests, crimes, 311 calls to the police, and—using a novel measure—property values. Maps, spatiotemporal modeling, and fixed effects regressions compare changes in stops and low-level arrests to changes in several measures of gentrification.




Participating Years


2017–2018

Consciousness and Revolution II

The place of consciousness in radical theory and practice is a subject of significant dispute, as global and local events continue to underline.