Queens
Queens is NYC’s largest and most ethnically diverse borough, home to immigrants from across Asia, Latin America, and beyond (residents speak 150+ languages). This diversity shapes Queens abolitionist work: immigrant justice and language accessibility are at its core. Community organizing often focuses on resisting ICE raids, demanding language support in schools, and fighting wage theft rather than directly on police. However, Queens also grapples with Rikers (located on the Queens–Bronx border) and hosted one of the city’s notorious ICE detention centers in Jamaica. Abolitionist trends include strong neighborhood mutual aid (e.g., in Astoria and Jackson Heights, especially during COVID), tenant organizing against greedy landlords, and youth-led climate justice (given environmental racism in areas like Willets Point). The DefundNYPD movement resonated in Queens, as seen in budget battles over the new NYPD academy in College Point. A mix of legacy immigrant rights groups and new radical formations (e.g., Queens Against Empire) collaborate across communities. Despite language barriers, Queens organizers embody “solidarity in every language,” expanding abolition’s reach beyond English-speaking circles and linking local struggles (street vendor harassment, over-policing of nightlife) to global anti-colonial movements.
La jornada
La Jornada is dedicated to providing comprehensive support to migrants, while strengthening and enriching the lives of neighbors with their paperwork and legal needs, providing them with the guidance and support they require during a crucial time in their lives. Additionally, La Jornada strives to be a reliable and compassionate resource for the community at large, offering food pantries, educational programs such as English courses, and a variety of additional services designed to enhance the quality of life for those in their communities.
astoria food pantry
Chhaya builds the power, housing stability, and economic well-being of South Asian and Indo-Caribbean communities in New York City. Based in Jackson Heights, Queens, Chhaya (meaning “shelter”) assists with housing issues from basement legalizations to tenant rights. While not explicitly abolitionist, they address how predatory landlords and policing (e.g., building inspectors used as ICE proxies) intersect.