After the War on Crime: Race, Democracy, and a New Reconstruction

After the War on Crime: Race, Democracy, and a New Reconstruction

After the War on Crime: Race, Democracy, and a New Reconstruction

After the War on Crime: Race, Democracy, and a New Reconstruction

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Overview

Since the 1970s, Americans have witnessed a pyrrhic war on crime, with sobering numbers at once chilling and cautionary. Our imprisoned population has increased five-fold, with a commensurate spike in fiscal costs that many now see as unsupportable into the future. As American society confronts a multitude of new challenges ranging from terrorism to the disappearance of middle-class jobs to global warming, the war on crime may be up for reconsideration for the first time in a generation or more. Relatively low crime rates indicate that the public mood may be swinging toward declaring victory and moving on.
However, to declare that the war is over is dangerous and inaccurate, and After the War on Crime reveals that the impact of this war reaches far beyond statistics; simply moving on is impossible. The war has been most devastating to those affected by increased rates and longer terms of incarceration, but its reach has also reshaped a sweeping range of social institutions, including law enforcement, politics, schooling, healthcare, and social welfare. The war has also profoundly altered conceptions of race and community.
It is time to consider the tasks reconstruction must tackle. To do so requires first a critical assessment of how this war has remade our society, and then creative thinking about how government, foundations, communities, and activists should respond. After the War on Crime accelerates this reassessment with original essays by a diverse, interdisciplinary group of scholars as well as policy professionals and community activists. The volume's immediate goal is to spark a fresh conversation about the war on crime and its consequences; its long-term aspiration is to develop a clear understanding of how we got here and of where we should go.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814727829
Publisher: New York University Press
Publication date: 07/01/2008
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 256
Sales rank: 733,649
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Mary Louise Frampton is Director of the Thelton E. Henderson Center for Social Justice at Boalt Hall School of Law, University of California, Berkeley.
Ian Haney López is Professor of Law at Boalt Hall and author of White by Law (NYU Press) and Racism on Trial.
Jonathan Simon is Professor of Law at Boalt Hall and author of Governing through Crime: How the War on Crime Transformed American Democracy and Created a Culture of Fear.

Table of Contents

Introduction Part I Crime, War, and Governance 1 The Place of the Prison in the New Government of Poverty Loïc Wacquant 2 America Doesn’t Stop at the Rio GrandeAngelina Snodgrass Godoy 3 From the New Deal to the Crime Deal Jonathan Simon 4 The Great Penal Experiment: Lessons for Social Justice Todd R. ClearPart II A War-Torn Country: Race, Community, and Politics 5 The Code of the Streets Elijah Anderson 6 The Contemporary Penal Subject(s) Mona Lynch 7 Th e Punitive City RevisitedKatherine Beckett and Steve Herbert 8 Frightening Citizens and a Pedagogy of Violence William LyonsPart III A New Reconstruction 9 Smart on Crime Kamala D. Harris 10 Rebelling against the War on Low-Income, of Color, and Immigrant Communities Gerald P. López 11 Of Taints and TimeJessie Allen 12 The Politics of the War against the Young Barry Krisberg 13 Transformative Justice and the Dismantling of Slavery’s Legacy in Post-Modern America Mary Louise Frampton AfterwordVan JonesContributors Index 
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