How does a Black man in Austin get sent to prison on a 70-year
sentence for stealing a tuna sandwich, likely costing Texas taxpayers
roughly a million dollars? In America, your liberty—or even your
life—may be forfeit not simply because of what you do, but where you
do it. If the same man had run off with a lobster roll from a lunch
counter in Maine it’s unlikely that he’d be spending the rest of
his life behind bars.
The U.S. incarcerates more people than any other industrial democracy
in the world. We have more ex-prisoners than the entire population of
Ireland, and more people with a felony record than the populations of
Denmark, Norway, New Zealand and Liberia combined. Why did the United
States become the world’s biggest jailer? And, just as importantly,
what has it done to us? What are the costs—socially, economically,
and politically—of having the world’s largest population of
ex-prisoners? And what can we do about it?
In this landmark book, Kevin B. Smith explains that the United States
became the world’s biggest jailer because politicians wanted to do
something about a very real problem with violent crime. That effort
was accelerated by a variety of partisan and socio-demographic trends
that started to significantly reshape the political environment in the
1980s and 1990s. The force of those trends varied from state to state,
but ultimately led to not just historically unprecedented levels of
incarceration, but equally unprecedented numbers of ex-prisoners.
Serving time behind bars is now a normalized social experience—it
affects a majority of Americans directly or indirectly. There is a
clear price, the jailer’s reckoning, to be paid for this. As Smith
shows, it is a society with declining levels of civic cohesion,
reduced economic prospects, and less political engagement. Mass
incarceration turns out to be something of a hidden bomb, a social
explosion that inflicts enormous civic collateral damage on the entire
country, and we must _all _do something about it.
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How Mass Incarceration Is Damaging America
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781538192399
Publisert
2024
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury USA
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter