Startseite 5. The Federal Funding That Fuels Mass Incarceration
Kapitel
Lizenziert
Nicht lizenziert Erfordert eine Authentifizierung

5. The Federal Funding That Fuels Mass Incarceration

  • Lauren- Brooke Eisen
Weitere Titel anzeigen von Columbia University Press
Excessive Punishment
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch Excessive Punishment
© 2024 Columbia University Press

© 2024 Columbia University Press

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. CONTENTS v
  3. INTRODUCTION 1
  4. PART ONE A HISTORY OF CRIME AND PUNITIVE RESPONSE
  5. 1. Addressing Violent Crime More Effectively 9
  6. 2. Losing Our Punitive Civic Religion 20
  7. 3. Mass Incarceration and Victim Disregard: Two Sides of the Same Coin 27
  8. 4. Crime, the Idea 37
  9. PART TWO FEDERAL FUNDING DRIVES PUNITIVE JUSTICE
  10. 5. The Federal Funding That Fuels Mass Incarceration 41
  11. 6. The Role of Federal Funding in Improving American Justice 51
  12. PART III. PROSECUTION AND SENTENCING
  13. 7. The Prosecutor Problem 61
  14. 8. The Trial Penalty: Coercive Plea Bargaining 71
  15. 9. End Mandatory Minimums 77
  16. 10. The American “Punisher’s Brain” 93
  17. 11. Punishment Over Prevention: U.S. Drug Policy 102
  18. 12. Improving Sentencing Policies to Improve Trust and Legitimacy 112
  19. PART IV. RACISM AND PUNITIVE EXCESS
  20. 13. How Punitive Excess Is a Manifestation of Racism in America 119
  21. 14. We Must End the Carcerality in Our Own Hearts 128
  22. 15. Race, Mass Incarceration, and the Disastrous War on Drugs 139
  23. PART V. UNCOVERING LIFE BEHIND PRISON WALLS
  24. 16. How Atrocious Prison Conditions Make Us All Less Safe 151
  25. 17. What Did You Call Me? 161
  26. 18. The Inhumanity of Solitary Confinement 166
  27. 19. A Culture of Abuse in Our Nation’s Prisons and Jails 172
  28. 20. Surviving a Daily Storm 178
  29. 21. COVID- 19 and the Struggle for Health Behind Bars 184
  30. 22. Independent Oversight Is Essential for a Safe and Healthy Prison System 190
  31. PART SIX PRISON REFORM IN THE UNITED STATES
  32. 23. How Some European Prisons Are Based on Dignity Rather Than Dehumanization 199
  33. 24. Embracing Dignity: Pennsylvania’s Experiment with Scandinavian Correctional Principles 211
  34. PART SEVEN PUNISHMENT OF YOUNG PEOPLE
  35. 25. Treating All Kids as Kids 219
  36. 26. Treat Kids Like Kids: The United States Is One of the Only Countries That Gives Life Sentences to Juveniles 226
  37. PART VIII. ECONOMIC INJUSTICE AND COLLATERAL CONSEQUENCES
  38. 27. Monetary Sanctions as a Pound of Flesh 233
  39. 28. Collateral Consequences and the Enduring Nature of Punishment 243
  40. 29. Probation and Parole as Punishment 253
  41. 30. A Holistic Approach to Legal Advocacy 261
  42. 31. The Dehumanizing Work of Immigration Law 266
  43. 32. Exploring Immigration Collateral Consequences Related to a Criminal Conviction 277
  44. PART NINE BEYOND BARS ANOTHER WORLD IS POSSIBLE
  45. 33. Providing Hope and Freedom to Overpunished People: Where Both Seem Impossible to Achieve 283
  46. 34. Countering Excessive Punishment with Chances for Redemption 293
  47. 35. Educating for Justice in the Era of Mass Incarceration 301
  48. 36. Redeeming Punishment in America 309
  49. 37. Criminal Justice Has Been and Must Remain Bipartisan to See Success 319
  50. 38. No One Answer to Overpolicing and Mass Incarceration But Many 329
  51. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 347
  52. CONTRIBUTORS 351
  53. INDEX 361
Heruntergeladen am 14.9.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.7312/eise21216-006/html
Button zum nach oben scrollen