The first civil right

how liberals built prison America

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Naomi Murakawa: The first civil right (2014)

260 pages

English language

Published May 18, 2014

ISBN:
978-0-19-989278-5
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OCLC Number:
866619825

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"The explosive rise in the U.S. incarceration rate in the second half of the twentieth century, and the racial transformation of the prison population from mostly white at mid-century to sixty-five percent black and Latino in the present day, is a trend that cannot easily be ignored. Many believe that this shift began with the "tough on crime" policies advocated by Republicans and southern Democrats beginning in the late 1960s, which sought longer prison sentences, more frequent use of the death penalty, and the explicit or implicit targeting of politically marginalized people. In The First Civil Right, Naomi Murakawa inverts the conventional wisdom by arguing that the expansion of the federal carceral state-a system that disproportionately imprisons blacks and Latinos-was, in fact, rooted in the civil-rights liberalism of the 1940s and early 1960s, not in the period after. Murakawa traces the development of the modern American prison system through several …

2 editions

Subjects

  • Administration of Criminal justice
  • Race relations
  • Discrimination in criminal justice administration
  • Imprisonment
  • Race discrimination
  • History
  • Punishment
  • African American prisoners

Places

  • United States