Cover: From the War on Poverty to the War on Crime: The Making of Mass Incarceration in America, from Harvard University PressCover: From the War on Poverty to the War on Crime in PAPERBACK

From the War on Poverty to the War on Crime

The Making of Mass Incarceration in America

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PAPERBACK

$22.00 • £19.95 • €20.95

ISBN 9780674979826

Publication Date: 09/04/2017

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464 pages

6-1/8 x 9-1/4 inches

11 halftones

World

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On WNYC’s On the Media, listen to Elizabeth Hinton explain—in the wake of mass public response over the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolice police—how the institution of policing in the United States has shifted over time, how police became the default agency for responding to emergencies, and how we might imagine and fund a different approach to keeping communities safe:

In the United States today, one in every thirty-one adults is under some form of penal control, including one in eleven African American men. How did the “land of the free” become the home of the world’s largest prison system? Challenging the belief that America’s prison problem originated with the Reagan administration’s War on Drugs, Elizabeth Hinton traces the rise of mass incarceration to an ironic source: the social welfare programs of Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society at the height of the civil rights era.

Johnson’s War on Poverty policies sought to foster equality and economic opportunity. But these initiatives were also rooted in widely shared assumptions about African Americans’ role in urban disorder, which prompted Johnson to call for a simultaneous War on Crime. The 1965 Law Enforcement Assistance Act empowered the national government to take a direct role in militarizing local police. Federal anticrime funding soon incentivized social service providers to ally with police departments, courts, and prisons. Under Richard Nixon and his successors, welfare programs fell by the wayside while investment in policing and punishment expanded. Anticipating future crime, policymakers urged states to build new prisons and introduced law enforcement measures into urban schools and public housing, turning neighborhoods into targets of police surveillance.

By the 1980s, crime control and incarceration dominated national responses to poverty and inequality. The initiatives of that decade were less a sharp departure than the full realization of the punitive transformation of urban policy implemented by Republicans and Democrats alike since the 1960s.

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