History Of Mass Incarceration

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Incarceration is the state of being confined in prison. The United States incarcerates more citizens than any other nation on earth. As of 2015 the United States makes up 4 percent of the world population, yet houses 22 percent of the worlds convicted. Historically Americans have been accused of establishing an ascriptive hierarchy, but is that all it is? History? Incarceration brings to light the ascriptive hierarchy that still lives and breathes in our current society. The America we live in was built upon three guiding principles, liberty, democracy, and political equality. Incarceration infringes on all of the rights we as Americans have become accustomed to. Mass incarceration has been a tool in the war on liberty, democracy, and political …show more content…

Instead, intellectual and political elites worked out the most elaborate theories of racial and gender hierarchy in U.S. history and partially embodied them in a staggering array of new laws governing naturalization, immigration, deportation, voting rights, electoral institutions, judicial procedures, and economic rights, but only partially (Smith 22). Incarceration is the modern equivalent to the laws that were put into place to suppress minorities in the past. White men have always been the political elite in the U.S. and that still remains clear as of 2015, when despite making up 40 percent of the population Non-Whites make up 60 percent of the incarcerated. Laws have been put into place to specifically target these minority groups that do not live in the same communities as white elites. The same liberties that were once wrongfully denied to African Americans are now denied to criminals, this is a new form of Jim Crow: Today it is legal to discriminate against ex-offenders in ways it was once legal to discriminate against African Americans. One you 're labeled a felon, depending on the state you’re in, old forms of discrimination, employment discrimination, housing discrimination, denial of the right to vote, and exclusion from jury service, are suddenly legal (Alexander

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