Lockdown America: Police and Prisons in the Age of Crisis, Revised and Expanded Edition
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Average customer review:Product Description
An updated edition of the classic examination of the link between crime and politics.
Why is criminal justice so central to American politics? Lockdown America not only documents the horrors and absurdities of militarized policing, prisons, a fortified border, and the federalization of the war on crime, it also explains the political and economic history behind the massive crackdown. This fully updated and expanded edition includes an afterword on the War on Terror, a meditation on surveillance and the specter of terrorism as they help reanimate the criminal justice attack. Written in vivid prose, Lockdown America will propel readers toward a deeper understanding of the links between crime and politics in a period of gathering economic crisis.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #127971 in Books
- Published on: 2008-08-04
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 336 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9781844672493
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Terrifying, informative and gripping." New York Press "Exhaustively documented...deserves a full hearing from anyone serious about ending the often horrific realities of the criminal justice system." Washington Post Book World "Essential reading for those in law enforcement and politics in Britain who are attracted by the rhetoric of zero tolerance." Times Literary Supplement "In the best tradition of investigative journalism, paced like a fine novel, it carries the authority of meticulous academic research." Independent "Riveting" The Nation"
About the Author
Christian Parenti is the author of The Soft Cage and The Freedom, and is currently writing a book on Afghanistan. He is a visiting fellow at the CUNY Graduate School's Center for Place, Culture, and Politics, and his articles appear regularly in The Nation. He lives in New York City.
Customer Reviews
Remarkable study of a failed system
In this remarkable book, American journalist and researcher Christian Parenti shows how the USA's economic and social crisis has produced a huge growth in criminalisation, especially through the war on drugs. He explains how capitalism creates poverty, through both crisis and policy.
From 1966 to 1974, profits fell by 30%. Reagan put interest rates up to 16.4% in 1981, causing a slump - ten million people were unemployed by 1982 and wages were slashed by 8%. Real unemployment for African American men has been more than 25% for three decades.
As Alan Budd, an economic advisor to Thatcher, said, "Rising unemployment was a very desirable way of reducing the strength of the working classes." Capitalism creates a surplus population, the reserve army of the unemployed, to drive wages down.
To manage the rising poverty, inequality and unemployment that capitalism causes, the state uses paramilitary forms of repression, segregation and criminalisation. These include paramilitary policing, SWAT (Special Weapons and Tactics) teams, zero tolerance policing, national surveillance and mass imprisonment. Both crime control and crime keep the people suppressed.
The US imprisonment rate was 100/120 per 100,000 until the 1981 slump. 31% of prisoners are in for property offences, 30% for drug offences, 9% for public order offences, and 29% for violent offences.
Parenti examines the USA's appalling prison industrial complex, which surely provide the rest of us with a model - of how not to run prisons. However, this has not stopped Labour ministers rushing to the USA trying to copy their masters.
Parenti shows how US prison guard unions have often successfully opposed the opening of privatised prisons, which have proved to be even worse than the public ones. Prisons have become ever bigger, with Titan prisons making the problems even bigger as well.
Everyone has to choose whether to blame the system that produces poverty, or to blame the poor. Parenti quotes Lenin, "every state is a `special repressive force' for the suppression of the oppressed class."
Parenti concludes, "My recommendations, as regards criminal justice, are quite simple: we need less. Less policing, less incarceration, shorter sentences, less surveillance, fewer laws governing individual behaviors, and less obsessive discussion of every lurid crime, less prohibition, and less puritanical concern with `freaks' and `deviants'."
Good start, drones on a bit
Came in the described condition(good). Had a great start up, but as it went it seemed to drone on a bit, but if you want to hear how arbitrary laws against harmless (pretty much just MJ) drugs came into existence and why the prison industry is doing so well, this is the book you are looking for.



