Mass Incarceration In The Age Of Colorblindness By Michelle Alexander

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In The New Jim Crow: Mass incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness, Michelle Alexander introduces readers to the phenomenon of mass incarceration in the United States and challenges readers to view the crisis as the “ the most pressing racial justice issue of our time.” In the introduction, Alexander writes “what the book is intended to do and that is to stimulate much needed conversation about the role of the criminal justice system in creating and perpetuating racial hierarchy in the United States.” We come to understand, How the United States create criminal justice system and maintain racial hierarchy through mass incarceration? How the current system of mass incarceration in the United States mirrors earlier systems of racialized …show more content…

According to Alexander (2010), states the United States, has switched to a new form of racism know as color blind racism. Color blind racism refers to contemporary racial inequality as the outcome of nonracial dynamics. The types of practices that take place under color blind racism are subtle, institutional and apparently nonracial. These practices are not racially overt in nature, such as racism under slavery, segregation, and Jim Crow laws. Instead, color blind racism flourishes on the idea that a potential cause of such disproportionately high incarceration rates for African Americans is that they are disproportionately poor. When black people were emancipated many things were in a shamble for all people. Whites didn’t know what type of control they were going to have over the people of color. At least when blacks were in slavery the racial order was most effectively maintained, by contact between slave owners and their slaves, they had the control for supervision and discipline, and there was less resistance or rebellion behavior when they had control. This threatens slave owner’s interest and created a social distance or an inferior behavior from slaves. It would seem that white control was unclear since slavery was gone (Alexander 2010). There is nothing new about the lack of correlation between earlier system, crime and punishment. Punishment is primarily a tool of social control, the extent or severity in which a person receives is based on the crime. The reality is that the American penal system has emerged as a system of social control

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