Histories of the American welfare state have been white histories, in part because scholars have presumed that welfare state institutions are benevolent and exist to assist those in need. But if we take seriously work that instead focuses upon the degree to which welfare state regimes affect citizens\u27 freedom to survive apart from dependence on the labor market or upon a male breadwinner, along with scholarship that highlights the malign functions of relief, then explicitly repressive institutions become legitimately within the purview of welfare state analysis. This article makes the formative case that slavery, Jim Crow, and the prison might be considered welfare state institutions, given their impact upon the material well-being of so...
From the beginning of its creation, the United States had relied heavily on the physical labor explo...
In Welfare Servitude, Professor Nice considers whether mandating work as a condition for receiving w...
In my thesis I attempted to synthesize two distinct ways of looking at racism in American\ud society...
Histories of American welfare have been stories about the state. Like Walter Trattner\u27s widely re...
de sociologie européenne du Collège de France Not one but several ‘peculiar institutions ’ have op...
In this article, I bring scholarship on welfare reform into discussion with work on crime control an...
This paper describes the ways in which African Americans were written out of or subordinated within ...
Prison-building is argued to be an intervention of last resort when a nation loses faith in the soci...
The Reagan Administration’s defunding of the American welfare state would end two decades of Black s...
This Article expands on the plight of James Somerset by exploring how the American justice system di...
The U.S. welfare state has been under attack from both sides of the aisle since the mid-1970s. Using...
This article complicates Wacquant\u27s three-sided schema of race, class and state by adding a focus...
This dissertation examines the racial implications of governmental initiatives designed to reduced w...
“A Freedom No Greater Than Bondage: Black Refugees and Unfree Labor at the Dawn of Mass Incarceratio...
Understanding long-run patterns in the incarceration of Black Americans requires integrating the stu...
From the beginning of its creation, the United States had relied heavily on the physical labor explo...
In Welfare Servitude, Professor Nice considers whether mandating work as a condition for receiving w...
In my thesis I attempted to synthesize two distinct ways of looking at racism in American\ud society...
Histories of American welfare have been stories about the state. Like Walter Trattner\u27s widely re...
de sociologie européenne du Collège de France Not one but several ‘peculiar institutions ’ have op...
In this article, I bring scholarship on welfare reform into discussion with work on crime control an...
This paper describes the ways in which African Americans were written out of or subordinated within ...
Prison-building is argued to be an intervention of last resort when a nation loses faith in the soci...
The Reagan Administration’s defunding of the American welfare state would end two decades of Black s...
This Article expands on the plight of James Somerset by exploring how the American justice system di...
The U.S. welfare state has been under attack from both sides of the aisle since the mid-1970s. Using...
This article complicates Wacquant\u27s three-sided schema of race, class and state by adding a focus...
This dissertation examines the racial implications of governmental initiatives designed to reduced w...
“A Freedom No Greater Than Bondage: Black Refugees and Unfree Labor at the Dawn of Mass Incarceratio...
Understanding long-run patterns in the incarceration of Black Americans requires integrating the stu...
From the beginning of its creation, the United States had relied heavily on the physical labor explo...
In Welfare Servitude, Professor Nice considers whether mandating work as a condition for receiving w...
In my thesis I attempted to synthesize two distinct ways of looking at racism in American\ud society...