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The New Jim Crow Essay

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The New Jim Crow is a book written by Michelle Alexander that discusses the rebirth of a caste-like system and race-related issues in the United States specific to African-American males and mass incarceration. Racial Critiques of Mass Incarceration: Beyond the New Jim Crow, is a scholarly article that examines and critiques mass incarceration as well as the analogy of the Criminal Justice system being the “new Jim Crow.” In The New Jim Crow, Alexander asserts that Jim Crow and slavery were caste systems, and that our current system of mass incarceration is also a caste system. The original Jim Crow laws, after slavery ended, promoted racial discrimination in public housing, employment, voting, and education. “There were vast differences between …show more content…

Blacks and whites who have dropped out of high school are ten times more likely to be incarcerated than those who have attended college. An African American man with some college education, the lifetime chance of going to prison actually decreased slightly. A black man born in the late 1960s who dropped out of high school has a 59% chance of going to prison in his lifetime whereas a black man who attended college has only a 5% chance. White men born in the late 1960s, the lifetime risk of imprisonment is more than ten times higher for those who dropped out of high school than for those who attended some amount of college. Washington, D.C., is the nation’s only majority-black jurisdiction that controls sentencing policy yet, despite these external forces, local black elected officials exert considerable power over crime policy and have the ability to push back against federal actors. The Old Jim Crow, was a series of legal restrictions, backed by state and private violence, imposed on black people by the white majority. When given the opportunity, blacks rejected it. According to Professor Forman, like a black person living under the Old Jim Crow, a convicted criminal today becomes a member of a stigmatized caste, condemned to a lifetime of second-class citizenship. Longer sentences has been a major cause of mass incarceration. Thus, changing how governments respond to all crime, not just drug crime, is critical to reducing the size of prison

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