At no time in history, and certainly in no other democratic society, have prisons been filled so quickly and to such capacity than in the United States. And nowhere has this growth been more concentrated than in the disadvantaged--and primarily minority--neighborhoods of America's largest urban cities. In the most impoverished places, as much as 20% of the adult men are locked up on any given day, and there is hardly a family without a father, son, brother, or uncle who has not been behind bars. While the effects of going to and returning home from prison are well-documented, little attention has been paid to the impact of removal on neighborhoods where large numbers of individuals have been imprisoned. In the first detailed, empirical exploration of the effects of mass incarceration on poor places, Imprisoning Communities demonstrates that in high doses incarceration contributes to the very social problems it is intended to solve: it breaks up family and social networks; deprives siblings, spouses, and parents of emotional and financial support; and threatens the economic and political infrastructure of already struggling neighborhoods. Especially at risk are children who, research shows, are more likely to commit a crime if a father or brother has been to prison. Clear makes the counterintuitive point that when incarceration concentrates at high levels, crime rates will go up. Removal, in other words, has exactly the opposite of its intended effect: it destabilizes the community, thus further reducing public safety. Demonstrating that the current incarceration policy in urban America does more harm than good, from increasing crime to widening racial disparities and diminished life chances for youths, Todd Clear argues that we cannot overcome the problem of mass incarceration concentrated in poor places without incorporating an idea of community justice into our failing correctional and criminal justice systems.
The book opens with a consideration of the impact of incarceration on families.
Addresses the issues of parenting behind bars and fostering successful family relationships after release.
for the New Deal can only be described as a broad-based social movement. Through social protest, the poor, the unemployed, the working and middle classes were able to exert considerable political pressure on the government to get ...
told me over the break, 'We don't want you, but by your family not wanting you, we gonna let you stay.'” Davida started back in school, but as soon as she felt like she was settling into a routine, her mother's boyfriend started ...
Maya Schenwar’s personal, openhearted sharing of her own family’s story, together with many other stories and real-world experiments with transformative justice, makes this book compelling, highly persuasive, and difficult to put down.
Part of the Wadsworth Contemporary Issues in Crime and Justice series, this text is a formative work that discusses the concepts of community within the context of justice policy and programs.
1, The Philosophy of Moral Development (San Francisco: Harper and Row, 1981 ). 19. Tewksbury, Erickson, and Taylor, “Opportunities Lost,” 319. 20. Tewksbury, Erickson, and Taylor, “Opportunities Lost,” 319. 21.
A thoroughly modern approach to community-based corrections, this comprehensive and logically-organized book presents in a balanced fashion all the alternatives to institutionalization, including electronic monitoring, house arrest, day-treatment, boot camp...
This book is necessary reading for all those seeking to understand the material consequences of mass incarceration and committed to reparative justice for the communities most affected by the prison industrial complex."—Jenn M. Jackson, ...
David Gilbert recently wrote that the "War on Crime," which began in the early 1970s, was in fact a conscious government counterinsurgency strategy to decimate and disrupt Black and other people of color communities across the United States ...