Literature DB >> 26462404

Redesigning Racial Caste in America via Mass Incarceration.

Gilda Graff.   

Abstract

This article argues that the era of mass incarceration can be understood as a new tactic in the history of American racism. Slavery was ended by the Civil War, but after Reconstruction, the gains of the former slaves were eroded by Jim Crow (a rigid pattern of racial segregation), lynching, disenfranchisement, sharecropping, tenantry, unequal educational resources, terrorism, and convict leasing. The Civil Rights Movement struck down legal barriers, but we have chosen to deal with the problems of poverty and race not so differently than we have in the past. The modern version of convict leasing, is mass incarceration. This article documents the dramatic change in American drug policy beginning with Reagan's October, 1982 announcement of the War on Drugs, the subsequent 274 percent growth in the prison and jail populations, and the devastating and disproportionate effect on inner city African Americans. Just as the Jim Crow laws were a reaction to the freeing of the slaves after the Civil War, mass incarceration can be understood as a reaction to the Civil Rights Movement.

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26462404

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Psychohist        ISSN: 0145-3378


  4 in total

1.  The Criminal Justice Experience of African American Cocaine Users in Arkansas.

Authors:  Nickolas Zaller; Ann M Cheney; Geoffrey M Curran; Brenda M Booth; Tyrone F Borders
Journal:  Subst Use Misuse       Date:  2016-08-03       Impact factor: 2.164

2.  Exploration of Factors Predictive of At-risk Fathers' Participation in a Pilot Study of an Augmented Evidence-Based Parent Training Program: A Mixed Methods Approach.

Authors:  Whitney L Rostad; Shannon Self-Brown; Clinton Boyd; Melissa Osborne; Alexandria Patterson
Journal:  Child Youth Serv Rev       Date:  2017-07-04

3.  Measuring socioeconomic adversity in early life.

Authors:  Kanwaljeet J S Anand; Joseph Rigdon; Cynthia R Rovnaghi; FeiFei Qin; Sahil Tembulkar; Nicole Bush; Kaja LeWinn; Frances A Tylavsky; Robert Davis; Donald A Barr; Ian H Gotlib
Journal:  Acta Paediatr       Date:  2019-01-25       Impact factor: 2.299

4.  Narratives of Transgender People Detained in Prison: The Role Played by the Utterances "Not" (as a Feeling of Hetero- and Auto-rejection) and "Exist" (as a Feeling of Hetero- and Auto-acceptance) for the Construction of a Discursive Self. A Suggestion of Goals and Strategies for Psychological Counseling.

Authors:  Alexander Hochdorn; Vicente P Faleiros; Paolo Valerio; Roberto Vitelli
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2018-01-17
  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.