Race and Incarceration
Prison
The American Penal System has gone through various changes but the most profound changes have been studied in relation the race inequality. Going to jail has become the norm for most of the African-American men. This inequality through incarceration is visible not only in men but in women also. There was a 78% increase in the criminal justice control rates for black women. It was studied that between 1980 and 1992, there was a 276% increase in the female prison population. This is compared to the 163% increase for black men in prison. (Davis 268) These figures give a rough estimate of how the prison population has changed and how the majority of the inmates are either Latinos or African-American. These high incarceration rates have therefore made researchers taste that prison time is normal part of the adulthood of a black man in a poor urban neighborhood. (Irwin and Austin)
While we talk about the victimization that takes place for black people, it only seems legit to discuss how white people are completely left out of the picture. Hegemonic white ethnicity which is typical of the powerful white elites goes on to apply on all the white people. Due to this reason, white people are rarely questioned or are a target of racialized discourses. (Webster 307)
We see a direct correlation between the persistent disadvantages of low education in African-Americans to the large scale incarceration that has been taking place. It is seen that this association is rather indirect than direct. The low level of education ultimately leads to urban deindustrialization, wealth inequality and residential segregation. Regardless, incarceration is shown to have a relation with the family instability, low wage, unemployment, recidivism and restriction of the political and social rights. This makes many think whether it is a vicious cycle by the policy makers and those in charge.
The high incarceration rate and the low education have been traced to the same sources. In other words, the cause for the black men doing crime and not getting enough education is the same. These young men are put in difficult family conditions, bad living conditions and very slim economic opportunities. (Petit and Western 154) Education directly correlates with the employment and occupation status. We saw earlier how economic strains cause a person to go into crime; similarly low schooling opportunities push the persons into crime as well. Poor academic performance and weak attachment to school is very frequent in the biographies of most of the adult criminals
Let alone the direct factors that cause these black men to enter the jail, there are other factors like victimization by the police. Policing efforts and the arrest made by the police therefore determine the amount of crime in that area. Victimization data by the police suggests and therefore strongly supports the racial disqualify that is present in incarceration today. (Langan) Even though this research is dampened by the crime actually committed by blacks due to poverty and joblessness, there has been racial disparity seen in the policing actions as well.
Researchers conclude that the poor are perceived as a threat or a risk to the social order by criminal justice officials. The poor therefore attract the police more than the rich attracts them. This disproportionate attention that the authorities give could due to the way criminal law is written or how the way it is applied in the courts and by the police. (Petit and Western 154) There is a class bias seen when it comes to sentencing someone. If everything was done fair and square, then every person would be given the same punishment regardless of how much education they have. However, studies have shown that defendants who are more educated receive shorter sentences as opposed to those who aren't that educated. Therefore, it is concluded that imprisonment is more common in low education men because they are victimized by the...
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