The United States incarcerates more people per capita than any other
industrialized nation in the world--about 1 in 100 adults, or more than
2 million people--while national spending on prisons has catapulted 400
percent. Given the vast racial disparities in incarceration, the prison
system also reinforces race and class divisions. How and why did we
become the world's leading jailer? And what can we, as a society, do
about it?
Reframing the story of mass incarceration, Heather Schoenfeld
illustrates how the unfinished task of full equality for African
Americans led to a series of policy choices that expanded the
government's power to punish, even as they were designed to protect
individuals from arbitrary state violence. Examining civil rights
protests, prison condition lawsuits, sentencing reforms, the War on
Drugs, and the rise of conservative Tea Party politics, Schoenfeld
explains why politicians veered from skepticism of prisons to an embrace
of incarceration as the appropriate response to crime. To reduce the
number of people behind bars, Schoenfeld argues that we must transform
the political incentives for imprisonment and develop a new ideological
basis for punishment.