a must read //Mass Incarceration and the New Jim Crow... via Moyers & Company February 2013 (1068 hits)
In the latest installment of his excellent New York Times series, Time and Punishment, John Tierney writes that mass incarceration trends of the past 30 years may have done more to harm crime-ridden communities and their residents than help them. As the number of prisoners has risen and the length of sentences has grown, Tierney writes: The shift to tougher penal policies three decades ago was originally credited with helping people in poor neighborhoods by reducing crime. But now that America’s incarceration rate has risen to be the world’s highest, many social scientists find the social benefits to be far outweighed by the costs to those communities. “Prison has become the new poverty trap,” said Bruce Western, a Harvard sociologist. “It has become a routine event for poor African-American men and their families, creating an enduring disadvantage at the very bottom of American society.” Among African Americans who have grown up during the era of mass incarceration, one in four has had a parent locked up at some point during childhood. For black men in their 20s and early 30s without a high school diploma, the incarceration rate is so high — nearly 40 percent nationwide — that they’re more likely to be behind bars than to have a job. According to a report from the Sentencing Project, a justice reform group, 75 percent of black males in Washington, D.C. can expect to go to prison or jail during their lifetime. Longer sentences mean many spend decades behind bars — well into middle and old age — even though studies have shown that the likelihood of committing a crime drops steeply once a man enters his 30s.
Mass incarceration also has a strong negative effect on an inmate’s family. Tierney follows one family that became homeless when the father began a twenty-year prison term at the age of 24. “Basically, I was locked up with him,” his wife told Tierney. “My mind was locked up. My life was locked up. Our daughters grew up without their father.” As Donald Braman, an anthropologist at The George Washington University Law School, noted, “The social deprivation and draining of capital from these communities may well be the greatest contribution our state makes to income inequality. There is no social institution I can think of that comes close to matching it.” In 2010, legal scholar Michelle Alexander, author of the book The New Jim Crow, explained on Bill Moyers Journal that the overtly racist policies of the past have been replaced with racially coded policies that still hurt minority communities and have lead to America having the highest incarceration rate in the world. This clip is from that discussion, in which Alexander, Bill Moyers and the Equal Justice Initiative’s Bryan Stevenson discuss the state of racial and economic justice on the 42nd anniversary of Martin Luther King, Jr.’s assassination.
Andrew Williams Jr In the latest installment of his excellent New York Times series, Time and Punishment, John Tierney writes that mass incarceration trends of the past 30 years may have done more to harm crime-ridden communities and their residents than help them. As th...See More Yesterday at 6:51pm · Like
Felicia Verdin Michelle Alexander wrote a landmark book that should be required in college history classes! The New York Times series, gives it more visibility! Cornel West, Tavis Smiley, and Marion Wright Edelman have been fighting the institutional racism in a society that creates a cradle to prison pipeline! Yesterday at 6:55pm · Like · 1
Felicia Verdin What has become a capitalist justice system in the for profit incarceration of our youth, is another injustice. Yesterday at 6:59pm · Like · 1
Pennsylvania Judge Sentenced For 28 Years For Selling Kids to the Prison System blog.blacknews.com Mark Ciavarella Jr, a 61-year old former judge in Pennsylvania, has been sentenc...See More Yesterday at 6:59pm · Like · 2
Andrew Williams Jr Thurgood Marshall Jr, Why Are You On The Board Of Directors For CCA?
This serves as both an open letter to Thurgood Marshall Jr, a PSA for those who didn’t know about his appointment to CCA and a reminder about mass incarceration, and the overrepresen...See More
Dear Thurgood Marshall Jr, Why Are You On The Board Of Directors For CCA? www.blackyouthproject.com Kim Moore wants to know why Thurgood Marshall Jr. sits on the board of directors for CCA (Corrections Corporation of America): "Having all this information, carrying your fathers last name and legacy, I must ask, are you betting on or against black men?" Yesterday at 7:05pm · Like · 5
Friday, May 24th 2013 at 11:49PM
DAVID JOHNSON
It's sad to think that our young Black men have to grow up in a communities where they have to wear a mean and tough exterior to survive. Neighborhood bullies tend to take advantage of those who appear to be weak. Black youth with good intentions have a hard time finding a job when they look like they're ready to start a fight, so they end up hussling to make ends meet.
Saturday, May 25th 2013 at 12:49AM
Helen Lofton
@DAVID AND HELEN...
LAST WEEK I WAS READING ABOUT A COUNTY NO TOO FAR FROM MY COUNTY WHOSE RESIDENTS ARE UP IN ARMS BECAUSE IF YOU HAVE NOT BEEN CAUGHT VIOLATING PAROLE FOR A MAJOR MURDER(S) YOU CAN'T GET A COURT DATE NOR ARRESTED!!!...
WEST COAST YOU CAN'T GET SENT TO PRISON THESE DAYS AND IN SOME PLACES YOU CAN'T EVEN BE SENT TO JAIL BECAUSE FORMER PRIVATE PRISON INMATES OCCUPY THEM. AND TIS WILL CONTINUE SINCE OUR GOVERNOR CAN'T GET THE COURTS TO OVER TURN THE MUST RELEASE ITS SPICIF QUOTA OF PRISON INMATES WAREHOUSED DURING THE PRIVATE PRISON BUILDING BOOM...IS THIS SOMETING LIKE WHY SUCH HIGH RATES OF PUTTING INTO PRISONS ON THE EAST COAST...AND BY THE WAY DOES N.Y. HAVE A THREE STRIKES LIKE CA. FL. AND TX...AND I ASK BECAUSE ALL OF THE 3 STRIKES STATES AHVE ENDED UP HAVING TO RELEASE THEIR WAREHOUSING OF PRISONERS TO SATISFY THE BUILDING BOOM ERA THAT HAS NOW BURSTEDITS BUBBLE!(NUP!!!)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA