In the last decade, a number of scholars have called the American criminal justice system a new form of Jim Crow. These writers have effectively drawn attention to the injustices created by a facially race-neutral system that severely ostracizes offenders and stigmatizes young, poor black men as criminals. I argue that despite these important contributions, the Jim Crow analogy leads to a distorted view of mass incarceration. The analogy presents an incomplete account of mass incarceration’s historical origins, fails to consider black attitudes toward crime and punishment, ignores violent crimes while focusing almost exclusively on drug crimes, obscures class distinctions within the African American community, and overlooks the effects of m...
Contemporary ideologies concerning the structure of the criminal justice system often purports that ...
This paper discusses the systematic biases that follow ex-felons after their release from imprisonme...
Mass incarceration has received extensive analysis in scholarly and political debates. Beginning in ...
In the last decade, a number of scholars have called the American criminal justice system a new form...
In the last decade, a number of scholars have called the American criminal justice system a new form...
This article revisits the claim that mass incarceration constitutes a new form of racial segregation...
[Abstract] Since the days of Jim Crow, the presence of racism and discrimination in the United Stat...
This work examines the phenomenon of mass incarceration in the United States. Particularly, it anal...
This Article revisits the claim that mass incarceration constitutes a new form of racial segregation...
Mass incarceration has received extensive analysis in scholarly and political debates. Beginning in ...
The mass incarceration of poor people of color represents a new American caste system that is the mo...
This analysis challenges the discourse of "The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorb...
In recent years, scholars have documented the racial disparities of mass incarceration. In this pape...
Since the era of Slavery, African Americans have been criminalized by the United States Justice Syst...
Abstract Mass incarceration is a popular term in today’s society that is means to describe the high ...
Contemporary ideologies concerning the structure of the criminal justice system often purports that ...
This paper discusses the systematic biases that follow ex-felons after their release from imprisonme...
Mass incarceration has received extensive analysis in scholarly and political debates. Beginning in ...
In the last decade, a number of scholars have called the American criminal justice system a new form...
In the last decade, a number of scholars have called the American criminal justice system a new form...
This article revisits the claim that mass incarceration constitutes a new form of racial segregation...
[Abstract] Since the days of Jim Crow, the presence of racism and discrimination in the United Stat...
This work examines the phenomenon of mass incarceration in the United States. Particularly, it anal...
This Article revisits the claim that mass incarceration constitutes a new form of racial segregation...
Mass incarceration has received extensive analysis in scholarly and political debates. Beginning in ...
The mass incarceration of poor people of color represents a new American caste system that is the mo...
This analysis challenges the discourse of "The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorb...
In recent years, scholars have documented the racial disparities of mass incarceration. In this pape...
Since the era of Slavery, African Americans have been criminalized by the United States Justice Syst...
Abstract Mass incarceration is a popular term in today’s society that is means to describe the high ...
Contemporary ideologies concerning the structure of the criminal justice system often purports that ...
This paper discusses the systematic biases that follow ex-felons after their release from imprisonme...
Mass incarceration has received extensive analysis in scholarly and political debates. Beginning in ...