Mass Incarceration In Chicago

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ood access and inequity within Chicago’s South and West Sides has been an issue for nearly one hundred years. It has sparked all types of attention ranging from good, surrounding the expansion of local food movements that include an influx of markets and farm stands, to the bad, the highly charged topic of access to food was a focal point surrounding the race riots of 1919 (Mikula 2015). Both sides of the issue have been covered by media, both mainstream and alternative outlets. With Chicago being such a politically influenced city, from corruption and nationally focused agenda to personal agenda focused on term renewals, mainstream media coverage is often faced with many biases leaving the people of the communities who face these issues repeatedly …show more content…

Both media outlets source data from the Department of Justice showing how African-Americans are disproportionately incarcerated in these area. The difference with the topic of mass incarceration when compared to food access is that there are no pragmatic options or solutions discussed by either media source. There are references to grants received bye ACLU, $50 million to reduce overall incarceration but there were no specific solutions mentioned, and how crime is handled but, due to systematic discrimination within our judicial system, and governments as a whole, simply changing our jail systems to meet the perspective outcome we will need to take a huge step forward in Social Justice reform rather than just looking at how we treat inmates (Badger …show more content…

Unfortunately, because this is the first time that this large of number of schools have closed down in a single district in such a short amount of time there is little observed data that help with viable solutions, schools continue to close and continue to have effects on residents. An article in the Atlantic did mention that many students that are affected by the closings did receive free or reduced lunch but no suggestion on how to help maintain food access to these students was talked about (Anderson 2016). Both types of media acknowledge that there is a problem with mass closing and staff layoffs; both also mention that there is an obvious political agenda that is responsible due to fact that the city runs the school district and can ultimately decide what reformation strategy it wants to use. Short of Emanuel no longer being Mayor there were no other solutions mentioned (Kelly 2015, Klein

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