In The Illusion of Free Markets (Harvard 2011), Professor Bernard Harcourt analyzes the evolution of a distinctly American paradox: in the country that has done the most to promote the idea of a hands-off government, we run the single largest prison complex in the entire world. Harcourt traces this paradox back to the eighteenth century and demonstrates how the presumption of government incompetence in economic affairs has been coupled with that of government legitimacy in the realm of policing and punishing. Harcourt shows how these linked presumptions have fueled the expansion of the carceral sphere in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Professor James Q. Whitman\u27s book review in the Harvard Law Review criticizes The Illusion of F...
capital as power crime Georg Rusche punishment systemic crisis unemployment United StatesThe United ...
Keally McBride’s Punishment and Political Order explores a paradox: punishment potentially reinforc...
Keally McBride’s Punishment and Political Order explores a paradox: punishment potentially reinforc...
In The Illusion of Free Markets (Harvard 2011), Professor Bernard Harcourt analyzes the evolution of...
In The Illusion of Free Markets (Harvard 2011), Professor Bernard Harcourt analyzes the evolution of...
It is widely believed today that the free market is the best mechanism ever invented to efficiently ...
According to the Enlightenment philosopher Montesquieu, as freedom advances, the severity of the pe...
What work do the categories “the free market” and “regulation” do for us? Why do we incarcerate one ...
Michael Meranze, Laboratories of Virtue: Punishment, Revolution, and Authority in Philadelphia, 1760...
For more than a decade, activists, scholars, journalists, and politicians of various stripes have be...
One of the frequently criticized aspects of American mass incarceration, privatized incarceration, i...
SEMINAR: "No Way Out: Crime, Punishment & the Capitalization of Power" WHERE & WHEN: Monday, Nove...
As in slavery, where people profited by the captivity and dehumanization of others, this essay argue...
The United States is often hailed as the world's largest 'free market'. But this 'free market' is al...
capital as power crime Georg Rusche punishment systemic crisis unemployment United StatesThe United ...
Keally McBride’s Punishment and Political Order explores a paradox: punishment potentially reinforc...
Keally McBride’s Punishment and Political Order explores a paradox: punishment potentially reinforc...
In The Illusion of Free Markets (Harvard 2011), Professor Bernard Harcourt analyzes the evolution of...
In The Illusion of Free Markets (Harvard 2011), Professor Bernard Harcourt analyzes the evolution of...
It is widely believed today that the free market is the best mechanism ever invented to efficiently ...
According to the Enlightenment philosopher Montesquieu, as freedom advances, the severity of the pe...
What work do the categories “the free market” and “regulation” do for us? Why do we incarcerate one ...
Michael Meranze, Laboratories of Virtue: Punishment, Revolution, and Authority in Philadelphia, 1760...
For more than a decade, activists, scholars, journalists, and politicians of various stripes have be...
One of the frequently criticized aspects of American mass incarceration, privatized incarceration, i...
SEMINAR: "No Way Out: Crime, Punishment & the Capitalization of Power" WHERE & WHEN: Monday, Nove...
As in slavery, where people profited by the captivity and dehumanization of others, this essay argue...
The United States is often hailed as the world's largest 'free market'. But this 'free market' is al...
capital as power crime Georg Rusche punishment systemic crisis unemployment United StatesThe United ...
Keally McBride’s Punishment and Political Order explores a paradox: punishment potentially reinforc...
Keally McBride’s Punishment and Political Order explores a paradox: punishment potentially reinforc...