The Reagan Administration’s defunding of the American welfare state would end two decades of Black socio-economic growth and lead to decades of oppression and mass incarceration. Using dog-whistle coded messaging to drive white Southerners to vote, Reagan effectively demolished a system that benefitted many Black Americans. The defunding of welfare programs directly led to an increase in wealth inequality between White and Black Americans not seen since the end of segregation. The Reagan Administration created the opportunity for future policymakers to incarcerate minority and poor communities in a disproportionate amount. This initial deterioration of the welfare state led directly to the modern issue of mass incarceration and wealth inequ...
The United States has the highest number of incarcerated people worldwide with a prison population o...
Is the path from incarceration to partaking in the franchise considerably challenging for people of ...
After decades of stability from the 1920s to the early 1970s, the rate of incarceration in the Unite...
The first historical account of federal crime control policy, "From Social Welfare to Social Control...
Abstract Mass incarceration is a popular term in today’s society that is means to describe the high ...
In this article, I bring scholarship on welfare reform into discussion with work on crime control an...
This thesis explores how shifting conceptions of the social contract surrounding welfare in the mid-...
Beginning in the 1970s, the United States experienced an exponential growth in its prison population...
Mass incarceration is a term used to describe the United States locking up people in prisons and jai...
America’s mass incarceration system functions as a tool to keep their black communities impoverished...
Prison-building is argued to be an intervention of last resort when a nation loses faith in the soci...
In 1971, President Richard Nixon named drug abuse as “public enemy number one” in the United States....
The record of economic well-being in the 1980s belied Reagan\u27s claim that Americans would be bett...
The 1960s brought the promise of a new era of social justice for all Americans. Indeed, the overturn...
In my thesis I attempted to synthesize two distinct ways of looking at racism in American\ud society...
The United States has the highest number of incarcerated people worldwide with a prison population o...
Is the path from incarceration to partaking in the franchise considerably challenging for people of ...
After decades of stability from the 1920s to the early 1970s, the rate of incarceration in the Unite...
The first historical account of federal crime control policy, "From Social Welfare to Social Control...
Abstract Mass incarceration is a popular term in today’s society that is means to describe the high ...
In this article, I bring scholarship on welfare reform into discussion with work on crime control an...
This thesis explores how shifting conceptions of the social contract surrounding welfare in the mid-...
Beginning in the 1970s, the United States experienced an exponential growth in its prison population...
Mass incarceration is a term used to describe the United States locking up people in prisons and jai...
America’s mass incarceration system functions as a tool to keep their black communities impoverished...
Prison-building is argued to be an intervention of last resort when a nation loses faith in the soci...
In 1971, President Richard Nixon named drug abuse as “public enemy number one” in the United States....
The record of economic well-being in the 1980s belied Reagan\u27s claim that Americans would be bett...
The 1960s brought the promise of a new era of social justice for all Americans. Indeed, the overturn...
In my thesis I attempted to synthesize two distinct ways of looking at racism in American\ud society...
The United States has the highest number of incarcerated people worldwide with a prison population o...
Is the path from incarceration to partaking in the franchise considerably challenging for people of ...
After decades of stability from the 1920s to the early 1970s, the rate of incarceration in the Unite...