{"id":237553,"date":"2017-08-24T04:45:22","date_gmt":"2017-08-24T08:45:22","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/uncategorized\/how-to-end-mass-incarceration-jacobin-jacobin-magazine-3.php"},"modified":"2017-08-24T04:45:22","modified_gmt":"2017-08-24T08:45:22","slug":"how-to-end-mass-incarceration-jacobin-jacobin-magazine-3","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/abolition-of-work\/how-to-end-mass-incarceration-jacobin-jacobin-magazine-3.php","title":{"rendered":"How to End Mass Incarceration &#8211; Jacobin &#8211; Jacobin magazine"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    The United States has not always been the worlds leading    jailer, the only affluent democracy to make incapacitation    its criminal justice systems goal. Once upon a time, it    fashioned itself as the very model of what     Michel Foucault called the disciplinary society. That is,    it took an enlightened approach to punishment, progressively    tethering it to rehabilitative ideals. Today, it is a carceral    state, plain and simple. It posts the highest incarceration    rate in the world  as well as the highest    violent crime rate among high-income countries.  <\/p>\n<p>    Politicians, reporters, and activists from across the political    spectrum have analyzed the ongoing crisis of mass    incarceration. Their accounts sometimes depict our current    plight as an expression of puritanism, as an extension of    slavery or Jim Crow, or as an exigency of capitalism. But these    approaches fail to address the question that ought to be    foremost in front of us: what was the nature of the punitive    turn that pushed the US off the path of reform and turned its    correctional system into a rogue institution?  <\/p>\n<p>    While the state-sanctioned brutality that now marks the    American criminal justice system has motivated many activists    to call for the complete abolition of prisons, we must begin    with a clearer understanding of the complex institutional    shifts that created and reproduce the phenomenon of mass    incarceration. Only then will we be able to see a clear path    out of the current impasse.  <\/p>\n<p>      The core features of Foucaults account of crime, punishment,      and social control are well known, although they have not      always been well understood. In the disciplinary society he      describes, authorities progressively withdraw punishment from      public view. And as discipline becomes increasingly private,      it shifts its focus from criminals bodies to their minds.      Increasingly, punishment is calculated to rehabilitate  it      is not meant to damage or destroy.    <\/p>\n<p>      Foucault highlighted how these disciplinary reforms created      new and more effective tactics for consolidating power,      especially as they spread to non-judicial institutions, like      schools, hospitals, factories, and offices. Unlike its      predecessor, sovereign power, which subtracts       giving kings the right to seize property, to damage or take      lives  disciplinary power corrects. The      Enlightenments gentle punishments would convince the      miscreant to mend his crooked ways, not beat the bad behavior      out of him.    <\/p>\n<p>      An American preference for rehabilitative discipline over      harsh punishment has deep roots. Resonant with the image of      the country as a nation of laws, American justice promised      to punish lawbreakers only as much as was necessary to      straighten them out. The Bill of Rights prohibited torture,      and the       Quaker reformers who founded early American      penitentiaries treated them as utopian experiments in      discipline, purgatories where penitents would suffer and      introspect until they found salvation.    <\/p>\n<p>      No doubt time and circumstance created different opinions      about how much suffering genuine personal reformation      required, but American practices generally aligned with      rising standards of decency. As       James Q. Whitman notes, Europeans once viewed the US      prison system as a model of enlightened practices. Foreign      governments sent delegations on tours of American      penitentiaries, and Alexis de Tocqueville extolled the      mildness of American punishment.    <\/p>\n<p>      Of course, we can find exceptions. Southern penal systems,      racialized after the Civil War under the convict-lease      system, didnt even pretend to have rehabilitative aims. They      existed to control the black population and supply cheap      labor for agriculture and industry. No doubt, too, the      spectacles of punishment associated with popular colonial      justice  the pillory, the stockade, the scarlet letter       cast long shadows across American history.    <\/p>\n<p>      But, even in the face of these contradictions, the US      criminal justice system seemed to support a grand narrative      of progressive history: the arc of history bends toward      justice, and the slave drivers lash and the lynch mobs      noose disappeared as the nation extended more rights and more      freedoms to more people. Reasoned law inexorably overcomes      communal violence and brute domination.    <\/p>\n<p>            Arthur Schlesinger Jr thus distinguishes the true essence      of the United States from its various manifestations of      racism and intolerance, glossing history as the perpetual      struggle of Americans to fulfill their deepest values in an      enigmatic world.    <\/p>\n<p>      As recently as fifty-odd years ago, Americans could still      believe this story. Here, as in other North Atlantic      countries, modern penal models that stress rehabilitation,      reform, and welfare had become the prevailing approaches. At      the peak of this trend, Great Society programs attempted to      address crimes socioeconomic causes: poverty, institutional      racism, alienation.    <\/p>\n<p>      Indeed, as a result of the legal reforms of the 1960s, the      American prison population was shrinking, and the state was      developing alternatives to incarceration: kinder, gentler      institutions that focused on supervision, reeducation, and      rehabilitation. To many observers, the prison system actually      seemed to be reforming itself out of existence.       Leo Bersanis review of Foucaults Discipline and      Punish began with the (now astonishing) sentence The      era of prisons may be nearly over.    <\/p>\n<p>      Nothing in Foucaults analysis  or anyone elses, as            David Garland has remarked  could have predicted what      followed: a sudden punitive turn designed to incapacitate      prisoners rather than rehabilitate them. The practice of      locking people up for long periods of time became the      criminal justice systems organizing principle, and prisons      turned into a reservation system, a quarantine zone where      purportedly dangerous individuals are segregated in the name      of public safety. The resulting system of mass      incarceration, Garland writes, resembles    <\/p>\n<p>        nothing so much as the Soviet gulag  a string of work        camps and prisons strung across a vast country, housing        [more than] two million people most of whom are drawn from        classes and racial groups that have become politically and        economically problematic. Like the pre-modern sanctions of        transportation or banishment, the prison now functions as a        form of exile.      <\/p>\n<p>      At the peak of this mania, one in every ninety-nine adults      was behind bars. Since 2008, these numbers have leveled off      and even posted modest declines, but the basic contours      remain intact. The United States ranks first in imprisonment      among significant nations, whether measured in terms of      incarceration rates  which remains five to ten times higher      than those of other developed democracies  or in terms of      the absolute      number of people in prison.    <\/p>\n<p>      Hyper-policing helped make hyper-punishment possible. By the      mid-2000s, police were arresting a staggering fourteen      million Americans each year, excluding traffic violations       up from a little more than three million in 1960. That is,      the annual arrest rate as a percentage of the population      nearly tripled, from 1.6 percent in 1960 to 4.5 percent in      2009. Today, almost one-third      of the adult population has an arrest record.    <\/p>\n<p>      At prevailing      rates of incarceration, one in every fifteen Americans      will serve time in a prison. For men the rate is more than      one in nine. For African American men, the expected lifetime      rate runs even higher: roughly one in three.    <\/p>\n<p>      These figures have no precedent in the United States: not      under Puritanism, not even under Jim Crow. While some      observers point to significant declines in crime statistics      after 1994 as evidence of these policies success,       informed estimates show that locking up millions of      people for long periods contributed to only as much as 27      percent and as little as 10 percent of the overall reduction      in crime.    <\/p>\n<p>      Eighth Amendment prohibitions notwithstanding, conditions in      Americas crowded prisons have sunk to the level of torture.      Indeed, the Supreme Courts       Brown v. Plata decision affirmed that overpopulation      itself constitutes cruel and unusual punishment, creating      unsafe and unsanitary conditions, depriving prisoners of      basic sustenance, including adequate medical care. The      court found that mass incarceration is incompatible with the      concept of human dignity.    <\/p>\n<p>      In this context, structural abuses invariably flourish.      Reports from       Amnesty International and Human      Rights Watch catalog various forms of sanctioned and      unsanctioned human rights abuses. These include beatings and      chokings, extended solitary confinement in maximum security      and so-called supermax prisons, the mistreatment of juvenile      and mentally ill detainees, and the inhumane use of      restraints, electrical devices, and attack dogs.    <\/p>\n<p>      Modern prisons have become places of irredeemable harm and      trauma.       J. C. Oleson surveys these dehumanizing warehouse      prisons, where guards have overseen systems of sexual slavery      or orchestrated gladiator-style fights between inmates.    <\/p>\n<p>            Sally Mann Romano describes shocking brutality in the      Security Housing Unit (SHU) of Californias Pelican Bay State      Prison, once touted as a model supermax prison:    <\/p>\n<p>        It was in this unit that Vaughn Dortch, a prisoner with a        life-long history of mental problems, was confined after a        conviction for grand theft. There, the stark conditions of        isolation caused his mental condition to dramatically        deteriorate, to the point that he smeared himself        repeatedly with feces and urine. Prison officials took        Vaughn to the infirmary to bathe him and asked a medical        technician, Irven McMillan, if he wanted a part of this        bath. McMillan responded that he would take some of the        brush end, referring to a hard bristle brush which is        wrapped in a towel and used to clean an inmate. McMillan        asked a supervisor for help, but she refused. Ultimately,        six guards wearing rubber gloves held Vaughn, with his        hands cuffed behind his back, in a tub of scalding water.        His attorney later estimated the temperature to be about        125 degrees. McMillan proceeded with the bath while one        officer pushed down on Vaughns shoulder and held his arms        in place. After about fifteen minutes, when Vaughn was        finally allowed to stand, his skin peeled off in sheets,        hanging in large clumps around his legs. Nurse Barbara        Kuroda later testified without rebuttal that she heard a        guard say about the black inmate that it looks like were        going to have a white boy before this is through his skin        is so dirty and so rotten, its all fallen off. Vaughn        received no anesthetic for more than forty-five minutes,        eventually collapsed from weakness, and was taken to the        emergency room. There he went into shock and almost died.      <\/p>\n<p>      This scene recalls the opening moments of Discipline and      Punish, in which Foucault graphically recounts the slow      destruction of Robert-Franois Damienss living body in 1757.      Of course, todays torture doesnt appear as a spectacle,      staged for public edification. Nor does it resemble the touch      of pain strategically administered as bitter medicine to      cure the lawbreaker of his sickness  a concept of corporeal      punishment that goes back to Plato. In those cases, pain      served a greater social purpose.    <\/p>\n<p>      In contrast, a set of invisible and unsanctioned but      nonetheless systematic practices, hidden away in the most      secret parts of the penal system, has allowed brutality to      flourish. Away from public scrutiny, it thrives on      retributions personalized and sadistic logic, all that      remains of the criminal justice systems moral purpose after      rehabilitation disappeared.    <\/p>\n<p>      Oleson summarizes the logic of the present system: [t]he      prison no longer attempts to make angels of men. In modern      prisons, a transformation of an entirely different kind is      taking place: men are becoming animals. We should not be      surprised that the modern penal system  a pressure cooker      of idle men packed into cramped space  devolves into overt      torture, for this prison was already an institution in which      awful things regularly happen. Nor should we be surprised      that these zealous punishments dehumanize the punishers no      less than the punished.    <\/p>\n<p>      The transition from a disciplinary to a punitive penal system      happened very quickly, although its implications would go      unnoticed for a long time. Arguably, we still dont fully      understand the nature of this cultural shift, which exceeds      the penal system and appears in a number of the institutions      of everyday life. But I get ahead of myself.    <\/p>\n<p>      The punitive turn began in the turmoil of the 1960s, a time      of rapidly rising crime rates and urban disorder. In 1968,      with US cities in flames and white backlash gaining momentum,      congress overwhelmingly passed  and Lyndon Johnson      reluctantly signed  the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe      Streets Act. As       Jonathan Simon has suggested, the act became something      like a blueprint for subsequent crime-control lawmaking.    <\/p>\n<p>      Shaped by a conservative coalition of Western Republicans and      Southern Democrats, the legislation invested heavily in local      law enforcement, asserted rules for police interrogations      designed to countermand the liberal Warren courts decisions,      including Miranda, allowed wiretapping without court      approval, and, in a successful bid to secure liberal support,      included modest gun control provisions.    <\/p>\n<p>      Although the legislation did little to increase criminal      penalties, it reversed the logic of earlier Great Society      programs; instead of providing direct investment, the acts      block grants ceded control to local agencies, often      controlled by conservative governors. Most importantly, the      act established the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration      (LEAA), an independent branch of the Justice Department.      Blaming low conviction rates on a lack of cooperation from      victims and witnesses, the LEAA launched demonstration      projects aimed at recruiting citizens into the war on crime.    <\/p>\n<p>      Tough talk about law and order articulated the strange new      angers, anxieties, and resentments racking the nation in the      1960s,       as Rick Perlstein has shown, and, by 1972, Richard Nixon      had consolidated a new governing coalition that still      dominates American politics. Nixons anti-crime narrative      appealed to the traditional Republican bases rural and      small-town values and incorporated conservative Southern      Democrats, who viewed the civil rights movement as lawless      and disorderly. It also attracted Northern hardhat      conservatives and white ethnic voters alarmed at escalating      crime, urban riots, and campus unrest. In short, the nascent      war on crime firmed up white backlash and gave durable      political form to a conservative counter-counterculture.    <\/p>\n<p>      But race reactionaries were not the only group spreading      tough law-and-order rhetoric.       Vanessa Barker has described how African American      activists, representing the communities hardest hit by      surging crime rates, also agitated for harsher penalties for      muggers, drug dealers, and first-degree murderers.    <\/p>\n<p>      In 1973, incarceration rates began an unprecedented      thirty-five-year climb, and political tides began to turn      even in liberal states. That year, New York passed the most      draconian drug legislation in the country. Under the      Rockefeller Drug Laws, the minimum penalty for possession of      small amounts of marijuana, cocaine, or heroin was fifteen      years to life. (It took until 2009 for New York to retire      much of what remained of these laws.)    <\/p>\n<p>      Ironically, the Left was helping to prepare the way for a      decisive turn to the Right. Leftist activists from the civil      rights, black power, and antiwar movements were leveling      heavy criticism against the criminal justice system, and      rightly so. Patterns of police brutality had been readily      discernible triggers of urban unrest and race riots in the      late 1960s, and minorities were overrepresented in the prison      population (although not as much as today). Summing up New      Left critiques, the American Friends Service Committees 1971      report, Struggle for Justice, blasted the US prison system      not only for repressing youth, the poor, and minorities but      also for paternalistically emphasizing individual      rehabilitation. Rehabilitate the system, not the individual,      the report urged  but the point got lost in the rancorous      debates that followed. As David Garland       carefully shows, the ensuing nothing works consensus      among progressive scholars and experts discouraged prison      reform  and ultimately lent weight to the arguments of      conservatives, whose approach to crime has always been a      simple one: Punish the bad man. Put lawbreakers behind bars      and keep them there.    <\/p>\n<p>      In 1974,       Robert Martinsons influential article What Works?      marked a definitive turning point. Examining rehabilitative      penal systems efficacy, Martinson articulated the emerging      consensus  nothing works, and rehabilitation was a      hopelessly misconceived goal.    <\/p>\n<p>      Tapping into the zeitgeist, Hollywood released Death      Wish that same year, followed by a host of other      vigilante revenge films. Exploitation movies enlisted a      familiar Victorian spectacle  sexual outrages against girls      and women  in the service of right-wing populism. Their      plotlines invariably connected liberals, civil libertarians,      and high-minded elites with the criminals who tormented the      ordinary citizen. Notably, however, such films carefully      muted the racial backlash that had inaugurated the punitive      turn: they depicted the vicious criminal as white, allowing      audiences to enjoy the visceral thrill of vengeance without      troubling their racial consciences.    <\/p>\n<p>      Comprehensive crime-control bills came and went during the      Reagan-Bush years, each more punitive than the last, and new      social movements emerged around the politicization of crime.    <\/p>\n<p>      The victims rights movement played an important role in this      story. The movement had started inside the liberal welfare      state, and proponents originally saw aid for victims of      violent crime as the other half of their attempts to      rehabilitate convicts. But, as conservatives recruited      victims advocacy and self-help groups into the war on crime,      the movement began to pit victims rights against the rights      of the accused, aligning with claims that hordes of criminals      were escaping justice on legal technicalities.    <\/p>\n<p>      By 1982, the Reagan administration was drawing this movement      securely within the compass of the right, as       Bruce Shapiro explained. That year, the Presidents Task      Force on Victims of Crime       published a report based largely on anecdotal horror      stories of double victimization and official      unresponsiveness. Based in part on this report, congress      passed the Victims of Crime Act in 1984.    <\/p>\n<p>      This movement focused national attention on victims at a time      when violent crime rates remained stubbornly high, providing      the moral underpinnings for a punitive approach to crime. It      persuaded voters to identify with victims, to diminish the      rights of the accused, and to accept excessive policing. It      aggressively lobbied for the harsher laws, enhanced      penalties, and court procedures that put the prison system on      steroids.    <\/p>\n<p>      But liberal rationales also helped the punitive turn put down      institutional roots. The victims rights movement had adopted      feminist rhetoric around rape and domestic violence. For      example, it claimed that survivors are victimized a second      time by their unsatisfying experiences with the police and      court system. During the same period, mainstream white      feminists came to view rape, sexual abuse, and domestic      violence through a law-and-order lens and many started      demanding harsh criminal penalties. This collusion between      conservative victims rights advocates and white feminists      undermined the historic liberal commitment to enlightened      humanitarianism and progressive reform, especially as these      related to crime and punishment.    <\/p>\n<p>      Although no one could have known it at the time, the early      1990s represented a high-water mark in the crime wave that      had begun in the early 1960s. In 1991, homicide rates crested      at 9.8 per 100,000, matching the rate recorded in 1974 and      almost matching the record rate of 10.2 per 100,000 set in      1980. After 1993, the thirty-year crime wave began to recede,      but the punitive turn persisted.    <\/p>\n<p>      In 1994, Democrats aggressively moved to take back the      crime issue from Republicans, and a Democratically controlled      congress passed the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement      Act. Like the 1968 act, this 1994 legislation pumped a great      deal of federal funding into local law enforcement, funding      100,000 new police officers, new prison construction, and new      prevention programs in poor neighborhoods. The new      legislation also included an assault weapon ban.    <\/p>\n<p>      Unlike the 1968 act, however, the 1994 version increased      penalties for hate crimes, sex crimes, violence against      women, and gang-related crimes. It required states to create      sex-offender registries and prodded them to adopt truth in      sentencing laws that would entail longer prison sentences.      It also dramatically expanded the federal death penalty and      eliminated support for inmate education programs.    <\/p>\n<p>      The 1994 act completely reversed Great Society penal      welfarism, consolidating the punitive approach, which      Democrats, liberals, and some progressive advocacy groups now      embraced. Indeed, lawmakers drafted many of the acts      sweeping provisions with liberal interest groups in mind.    <\/p>\n<p>      We have now lived through more than fifty years of this      punitive turn. Its resilience resists simple explanations.      Originally a conservative phenomenon, it condensed fears over      rising crime rates with the political reaction to the      upheavals of the 1960s. In its middle period, liberal aims      and rhetoric helped spread the logic of incapacitation,      enshrining the victim as the subject of governance and      treating the offender like toxic waste to be disposed of or      contained. Sensational journalism contributed to this shift,      honing the publics focus on the victim, stoking panic and      outrage.    <\/p>\n<p>      Successive waves of draconian legislation targeted outsized      monsters: drug dealers, repeat offenders, gang members,      sexual predators, terrorists and their sympathizers.      Americas zeal for punishment has been bolstered not by one      or two causes but by a variety of changing factors. Today,      perhaps, it persists as much out of institutional inertia as      anything else.    <\/p>\n<p>      If my thumbnail history is accurate, then we must recognize      many of the prevailing critiques of American punishment today      as either erroneous or partial and inadequate.    <\/p>\n<p>      For example, we sometimes see scholarly work that treats mass      incarceration as an instance of Foucaults theorized      disciplinary system. It would be difficult to imagine a more      confused approach. No doubt, todays system has retained many      of the disciplinary regimes features: the existence of an      institution called the prison; forms of power that      penetrate even the smallest details of everyday life; the      production of a carceral archipelago that exports      surveillance from the penal institution to the entire social      body. But all this tells us is that institutions communicate      with each other: such examples of connectivity do not belong      to the disciplinary mode of power alone.    <\/p>\n<p>      In fact, the current regime of power represents a radical      break with the disciplinary regimes logic and aims: by the      early 1970s, the United States was renouncing the corrective      focus of penal welfarism, and it now deploys supplementary      surveillance beyond the walls of the prison not to      rehabilitate offenders or regulate conduct but to catch      lawbreakers and feed more and more people into the prison      system.    <\/p>\n<p>      Scholars who study the penal system have developed a large      body of work connecting mass incarceration to neoliberal      economic policies of deregulation and privatization. Some      posit a neoliberal cause and a punitive effect, while others      argue that deregulation and privatization exacerbated social      inequalities and therefore fostered a fear of crime,      ultimately producing more surveillance, policing, and      incarceration.    <\/p>\n<p>            Bernard Harcourt provides a broader view, meticulously      examining how classical liberal and neoliberal theories      approach policing and punishment as market functions and      regulators. In my view, however, he never quite demonstrates      a strong connection between such models and present-day      lawmaking, penalties, and practices.    <\/p>\n<p>      No doubt, these analyses express an elemental truth about      capitalism and coercion. The hidden hand of the market will      never work without the hidden fist, as       an apologist for both once put it. But the language that      describes societys humdrum workings cannot explain systemic      changes or historic shifts. Nor should we assume that      whatever intensifies capitalism will also intensify coercive      tactics. After all, neoliberalism is a global phenomenon, but      the punitive state remains distinctly American, at least      among developed democracies.    <\/p>\n<p>      In any case, arguments that link neoliberalism and mass      incarceration do not match the actual historical trajectory      or the varied political currents in play. The punitive turn,      as I have sketched it, began in the mid-to-late 1960s, but      neoliberal policies did not begin gaining ascendency until      the late 1970s.    <\/p>\n<p>      Certainly, mass incarceration has had large economic effects.            Bruce Western and Katherine Beckett estimated that,      during the 1990s, Americas zeal for incarceration shaved two      percentage points off unemployment figures.       Roughly 4 percent of the civilian labor force either      works for the penal system or works to put people in prison.      If one includes private security positions and workers who      monitor or guard other laborers, the results are striking: in      an increasingly garrisonized economy, one out of every four      or five American laborers is employed in what       Samuel Bowles and Arjun Jayadev call guard labor.    <\/p>\n<p>      No doubt, the American variant of neoliberalism used these      facts to help establish itself. Indeed, one might conclude      that the punitive turn, with its disdain for rule-breakers,      losers, and outcasts, paved the way for the neoliberal turn,      with its love of the market.    <\/p>\n<p>      Another common line of criticism begins by recognizing the      role liberals have played in constructing the punitive state.      This scholarship conveys essential truths, but it too often      overcorrects the prevailing storyline and erases valuable      points of reference.    <\/p>\n<p>      Naomi Murakawas book,       The First Civil Right, is a case in point. The      author scrutinizes New Deal timidity in the face of racial      violence and calls attention to prominent Democrats and      liberals who helped build the prison state by pursuing      color-blind laws and modern police forces. In telling this      important story, however, Murakawa blurs the important      distinction between the Great Society approach to law      enforcement and the punitive turn that followed.    <\/p>\n<p>      Had the Democratic Party stayed its fundamentally      social-democratic course, had it kept with the penal systems      reformist program, had the policies of Johnsons Attorney      General Ramsey Clark remained in place, and  this is no      small matter  had the criminal justice system continued to      develop alternatives to incarceration, the United States      would not have evolved into a carceral state.    <\/p>\n<p>      It is of course possible that prison rates would still have      risen with the crime rates between the 1970s and the 1990s,      but they would not have exploded, and mass incarceration      would have remained the stuff of dystopian fiction.    <\/p>\n<p>      Many activists, journalists, and scholars have highlighted      draconian drug penalties as a primary cause of mass      incarceration. To be sure, the war on drugs played a      significant role in the prison systems growth, especially      during the 1980s. But it represents just one element of the      larger war on crime and has been slowly winding down since      the early 2000s.    <\/p>\n<p>      Today, drug      offenders represent only about 15 percent of sentenced      prisoners. While this is by no means a negligible number, we      need a wider perspective. Enhanced penalties for a variety of      offenses  drug possession and distribution, surely, but also      violent crimes, repeat offenses, crimes committed with a      firearm, and sex crimes  have all fueled the growth of the      penal system. One often-overlooked population is parole      violators, who represented 26 percent of prison admissions in      2013. The fact that the parole system, devised to reduce the      prison population, now enlarges it gives us important clues      about the self-perpetuating nature of the system today.    <\/p>\n<p>      Finally, sociologists, criminologists, and critical race      scholars have closely scrutinized the racial disparities in      arrest, prosecution, and incarceration rates. Many conclude      that mass incarceration constitutes a       modern regime of racial domination or a       new Jim Crow.    <\/p>\n<p>      This perspective highlights important facts. While African      Americans make up only 13 percent of drug users,       they account for more than a third of drug arrestees,      more than half of those convicted on drug charges, and 58      percent of those ultimately sent to prison on drug charges.      When convicted, a black person can expect to serve almost as      much time for a drug offense as a white person would serve      for a violent offense.    <\/p>\n<p>      These statistics demonstrate how race-neutral laws can      produce race-biased effects, especially when police,      prosecutors, juries, and judges make racialized judgments all      along the way. Needless to say, had the mania for      incarceration devastated white middle- or even working-class      communities as much as it has black lower- and working-class      communities, it would have proved politically intolerable      very quickly.    <\/p>\n<p>      But the racial critique consistently downplays the effects of      mass incarceration on non-black communities. The      incarceration rate for Latinos has also risen, and the      confinement and processing of       undocumented immigrants has become especially harsh. And      although white men are imprisoned at a substantially lower      rate than either black or brown men, there are still more      white men in prison, in both raw and per capita numbers, than      at any time in US history.    <\/p>\n<p>      In mid-2007, 773 of every 100,000 white males were      imprisoned, roughly one-sixth the rate for black males (4,618      per 100,000) but more than three times the average rate of      male confinement from the 1920s through 1972. As       James Forman Jr argues, the racial critiques focus on      African American imprisonment rates expressly discourages the      cross-racial coalitions that will be required to dismantle      mass incarceration.    <\/p>\n<p>      In his important contribution to this debate, Forman has      outlined the racial critiques main limitations. First, he      argues that this analysis minimizes the historical effect of      spiking crime rates on public opinion and lawmaking. By      blaming only white backlash for harsher penalties, the racial      critique obscures substantial levels of black support for      these policies.    <\/p>\n<p>      Second, Forman shows that the often-invoked Jim Crow system      makes for a poor analogy with mass incarceration. Jim Crow      was a legal caste system that took no notice of class      distinctions among black people. By contrast, todays      punitive system does not affect all African      Americans the same way; rather, it predisposes the poorest      and least educated to incarceration, and the impact of mass      incarceration is concentrated in black inner-city      neighborhoods. (As       Bruce Western has shown, the risk of going to prison for      college-educated black men actually decreased slightly      between 1979 and 1999.)    <\/p>\n<p>      Third, because of its emphasis on drug laws, the racial      critique skirts the important question of violent crime.      Roughly half the prisoners now in custody were convicted of      violent crimes, and racial disparities among this population      are even wider. [An] effective response to mass      incarceration,       Forman concludes, will require directly confronting the      issue of violent crime and developing policy responses that      can compete with the punitive approach that currently      dominates American criminal policy.    <\/p>\n<p>      We might make a similar argument about the racial critique of      abusive policing, which highlights important injustices but      fails to provide a comprehensive picture of the whole system.      Police do kill more black than white men per capita, a      disparity that only increases in the smaller subset of      unarmed men killed in encounters with police. But in      raw numbers cops kill almost twice as many white men, and      non-blacks make up about 74 percent of the people killed by      police. We cannot dismiss these numbers as collateral      damage from a racialized system that targets black bodies.    <\/p>\n<p>      Examining the profile of these unarmed men is revelatory.      Statistically, an unarmed white man has a slightly smaller      chance of being killed by law enforcement than he does of      being killed by lightning; an unarmed black mans is a few      times more. In either case, these rates are many times higher      than in other affluent democracies, where violent crime rates      are lower, the citizenry is less armed, and police  if armed      at all  are less trigger-happy.    <\/p>\n<p>      Whether black or white, the victims of police      shootings have a lot in common: many were experiencing      psychotic episodes  either due to chronic mental illness or      drug use  when the police were called. Many had prior arrest      records or were otherwise previously known to the police.      Whether black, white, or brown, the victims of police      shootings are disproportionately sub-proletarian or lower      working-class.    <\/p>\n<p>      Exceptions occur  the       white middle-class teen shot in the back while fleeing      from the police; the       black child spotted in the park and hastily shot with      what turned out to be a toy gun  but most victims appear to      have lived lives of extreme precarity, variously marked by      racial discrimination, poverty, mental illness, and social      abandonment.    <\/p>\n<p>      Thus far I have described the rise of the carceral state in      largely negative terms: what happened in the late 1960s was      not only a war on drugs nor a new system of racial      domination but something wider. A succession of changing      motives and rationales supported the punitive turn, and the      urge to punish came from an array of sectors and      institutions. The time has come to sum up my analysis in more      positive terms.    <\/p>\n<p>      First, beginning in the 1970s, all social institutions turned      toward detection, capture, and sanction. A broad-spectrum      cultural shift away from values of forbearance, forgiveness,      and redemption animated this transformation. The punitive      turn was, first and foremost, a cultural turn.    <\/p>\n<p>      Many observers today look skeptically at cultural      explanations of this sort, which claim that people do      x because they believe y. From      structuralism to poststructuralism and beyond, a cavalcade of      theoretical currents promoted an abstract idea of culture,      severing it from history and political economy. In      highlighting the cultural element in these developments,      however, I do not mean to suggest that culture always sets      the course of historical events, only that it sometimes does       a point that Friedrich Engels was also keen to make.    <\/p>\n<p>      Further, I do not assert that once the desire to punish got      into peoples heads, it spread uniformly throughout society,      nor would I argue that this cultural shift sprang into being      ex nihilo.    <\/p>\n<p>      At its inception, the punitive turn found fertile ground in      preexisting institutions of race and class. As it developed,      political actors and moral entrepreneurs reworked received      ideas, some of them older than the republic, some of them      torn from the headlines. The United States long history of      capitalism and various forms of power all participated in the      carceral states development.    <\/p>\n<p>      Second, federal legislation played a key role in      institutionalizing and hardening this cultural change. This      was not merely a question of mechanizing the law with      mandatory minimum sentences or three strikes provisions but      of automating a system of interconnecting institutions.    <\/p>\n<p>      The nucleus of this development was already present in the      1968 Safe Streets Act, aimed at expanding and modernizing      policing, and in the LEAA, designed to increase prosecution      and conviction rates. From this start, police forces grew,      became more proactive, and made more arrests.    <\/p>\n<p>      Securing greater cooperation from more victims, prosecutors      brought more cases to court  often with higher charges.      Responding to the shifting mood, judges sentenced more      defendants. Across four decades, legislators passed laws that      criminalized more activities, increased sentences, and      expressly barred compromise, early release, consideration of      mitigating circumstances, and so on. Put simply, the law      became more punitive. Such mechanisms could persist under      changing conditions because a vast institutional network      spanning the state and civil society actively produced fresh      rationales for them.    <\/p>\n<p>      The punitive turn was consolidated into a punitive avalanche.    <\/p>\n<p>      The result was a transformed system, in which prison, parole,      and so on were stripped of their disciplinary aims      (reeducation, rehabilitation, reintegration) and reoriented      toward strictly punitive goals (detection, apprehension,      incapacitation). Horkheimer and Adorno would have called this      instrumental rationality: a nightmare version of      bureaucracy that suspends critical reasoning and tries to      establish the most efficient means to achieve an irrational      end.    <\/p>\n<p>      The present moment seems propitious for change. Violent crime      rates have fallen to levels not seen since the early 1960s,      reducing public pressure for harsh laws and tough sentences.      Upbeat journalists periodically write stories covering more      rational approaches to crime and punishment in even      conservative states. The criminal justice systems racial      disparities have become a point of national embarrassment,      and, as early as 2007, the United States Sentencing      Commission began retroactively intervening to reduce the      sentences of some federal inmates convicted on crack-cocaine      charges. Polls suggest that Americans across the political      spectrum largely support reducing the number of people in      prison.    <\/p>\n<p>      Improvements have moved slowly, however. The prison      population fell from a peak of 2.3 million in 2008 to 2.1      million today, but more substantial declines do not appear to      be forthcoming. Thanks to our federal system, substantially      reforming the carceral regime will prove difficult: it will      demand revising thousands of laws and practices at mostly      local levels.    <\/p>\n<p>      Meanwhile, the Left is divided over how to imagine and      advocate for our goals. Prison abolitionism has gathered      steam among some activists, although it shows little sign of      winning over the wider public. With evangelical zeal,      abolitionists insist that we must choose between abolition      and reform, while discounting reform as a viable option. The      history of the prison system, they say, is a history of      reform  and look where that has gotten us.    <\/p>\n<p>      I have tried to show here whats wrong with this argument. It      is remarkably innocent of history. In fact, the history of      reform was interrupted some time around 1973 and what we have      had instead for the past five decades is a history of      counter-reform. The unconscionable conditions we see      today are not inevitable byproducts of the prison; they are      the results of the punitive turn.    <\/p>\n<p>      Abolitionists base their approach on an analogy between the      prison system and chattel slavery. This is a strained analogy      at best, and it only appears convincing in light of the      oversized and       unusually cruel American penal system. Slavery was an      institution for the extraction of unfree labor over a      persons (and his or her childrens) lifetime; the prison is      an institution that imposes unfreedom for a set period of      time as punishment for serious infractions  historically      with the express bargain that at least theoretically      the lawbreaker was to be improved and reintegrated into      society. The better analogy might be with other disciplinary      institutions, which also to varying degrees curb freedoms in      the name of personal and social good: the school, the      hospital, the psychiatric institution.    <\/p>\n<p>      Abolitionists usually respond to the obvious criticism  but      every country has prisons  by citing Angela Daviss      polemical work,       Are Prisons Obsolete? Slavery, too, was once      universal, they point out; it required the abolitionists      utopian vision to put an end to that unjust institution.    <\/p>\n<p>      But this, too, misstates history. By the time American      abolitionism got fully underway in the 1830s, much of Europe      and parts of Latin American had already partially or wholly      abolished slavery. The Haitian Revolution had dealt the      institution a major blow, and slavery was imploding in parts      of the Caribbean. A world without slavery was scarcely      unthinkable. The same cannot be said of prisons: all signs      suggest that the public  and not only in the United States       believes that prisons are legitimate.    <\/p>\n<p>      Abolitionist arguments usually gesture at restorative      justice, imagining that some sorts of community institutions      will oversee non-penal forms of restitution. But here, we are      very far out on a limb. Such models might more or less work      in small-scale, face-to-face indigenous or religious      communities. But, in modern cities, it is implausible to      think that families, kinship networks, neighborhood      organizations, and the like can adjudicate reconciliation in      a fair, consistent manner.    <\/p>\n<p>      In short, abolitionism promises a heaven-on-earth that will      never come to pass. What we really need to do is fight for      measures that have already proven humane, effective, and      consistent with social and criminal justice.    <\/p>\n<p>      Consider Finland. In the 1950s, it had high crime rates and a      punitive penal system with high incarceration rates and      terrible prison conditions. In these regards Finland then was      much like the United States today. After decades of      humanitarian and social-democratic reforms, the country now      has less than one-tenth the rate of incarceration as the      United States. Its prisons resemble dormitories with      high-quality health care, counseling services, and      educational opportunities. Not coincidentally, its prison      system does not breed anger, resentment, and recidivism.    <\/p>\n<p>            Finlands system aligns with that of other       Nordic and       Northern European nations, all of whom remained      continuously on the path of reform. There, small-scale penal      institutions are insulated from public opinion, with its      periodic rages against lawbreakers, and prioritize genuine      criminological expertise. They have expressly rehabilitative      aims, working not only to punish but also to repair the      person and restore him to society. Penalties top out at      around twenty years, consistent with the finding that longer      sentences have neither a rehabilitative nor a deterring      effect. Many Scandinavian prisons have no walls and allow      prisoners to leave during the day for jobs or shopping.      Bedrooms have windows, not bars. Kitchens and common areas      resemble Ikea displays.    <\/p>\n<p>      Rather than call for the complete abolition of prisons  a      policy unlikely to win broad public support  the American      left should fight to introduce these conditions into our      penal system. We should strive not for pie-in-the-sky      imaginings but for working models already achieved in      Scandinavian and other social democracies. We should demand      dramatically better prison conditions, the release of      nonviolent first offenders under other forms of supervision,            discretionary parole for violent offenders who provide      evidence of rehabilitation, decriminalization of simple drug      possession, and a broad revision of sentencing laws. Such      demands would attract support from a number of prominent      social movements, creating a strong base from which we can      begin to build a stronger, universal safety net.    <\/p>\n<p>      Institutions become obsolete only when more effective and      more progressive alternatives become available. The poorhouse      disappeared when its functions were replaced by social      security, public assistance, health care clinics, and mental      and psychiatric hospitals. We see no such emergent      institutions on the horizon today that might render prisons a      thing of the past. What we see instead are examples of      criminal justice systems that have continued reforming,      modulating, humanizing, shrinking, and decentralizing the      functions of the prison. Creating just such a correctional      system, based on genuinely rehabilitative goals consistent      with our view of social justice, should be a main task of      socialists today.    <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Original post:<\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/jacobinmag.com\/2017\/08\/mass-incarceration-prison-abolition-policing\" title=\"How to End Mass Incarceration - Jacobin - Jacobin magazine\">How to End Mass Incarceration - Jacobin - Jacobin magazine<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> The United States has not always been the worlds leading jailer, the only affluent democracy to make incapacitation its criminal justice systems goal. Once upon a time, it fashioned itself as the very model of what Michel Foucault called the disciplinary society. That is, it took an enlightened approach to punishment, progressively tethering it to rehabilitative ideals.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/abolition-of-work\/how-to-end-mass-incarceration-jacobin-jacobin-magazine-3.php\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"limit_modified_date":"","last_modified_date":"","_lmt_disableupdate":"","_lmt_disable":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[431579],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-237553","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-abolition-of-work"],"modified_by":null,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/237553"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=237553"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/237553\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=237553"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=237553"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=237553"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}