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Beyond These Walls
Beyond These Walls: Rethinking Crime and Punishment in the United States | Tony Platt
1 post | 1 read | 4 to read
A groundbreaking investigation into the roots of the American criminal justice system reveals how the past bleeds into the present The injustices of the contemporary American criminal justice system are well known: the worlds leader in rates of imprisonment; macho policing that is routinely indifferent to human rights in impoverished communities; astonishing cruelties that characterize day-to-day life in jails and prisons; taken-for-granted institutionalized racism displayed everywhere in full sight. What is less known and poorly understood is how the United States achieved this dubious status. Drawing upon original research, an extraordinary variety of sources, and an interdisciplinary perspective, Beyond These Walls calls for imaginative thinking about what prisons might have in common with ghettos and reservations, for recognizing the public functions of private security, for considering the relationship between foreign and domestic criminal justice policies, and for understanding how the public welfare system demeans and criminalizes poor women. Tony Platt explores the deep historical roots of the Trump administrations law and order agenda, with specific attention to dynamics of race, class, and gender. In addition to explaining the persistent failures of past reform efforts, in particular how supposedly benevolent ideas led to an expansion rather than contraction of what Justice Sonia Sotomayor calls the carceral state, Beyond These Walls is a call to action, making a bold case for structural reforms that would guarantee justice for all.
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Hour 14 of #24b4Monday - Just got this book from NetGalley, so thought I'd read it for a while. The first chapter was interesting, though a little scattered.

Reviewsbylola This definitely sounds promising! 6y
BeansPage You're doing great! 🤘🏻 6y
the_hibernator Also hour 17. 6y
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the_hibernator @Reviewsbylola This is certainly an important topic, though so far the book reads as a list of facts and statistics with very little narrative component. This is exactly the type of book fact-hungry readers like, but I prefer more opinions and passion. 6y
the_hibernator Notes: The second chapter mainly contained stats and facts about the unreasonably high percentages of poor black men who are incarcerated, and the stats on poor black women who are then left on welfare, a state that is highly stigmatized. 6y
the_hibernator Notes: Third chapter read a lot easier than the first two, with fewer lists of stats and more narrative. It discussed the idea that the ratio of black to white incarceration rates are not actually unprecidented, and covers historical evidence of this claim. 6y
the_hibernator Notes: Yup! I'm beginning to enjoy this book. The narrative doesn't flow seamlessly, but it is full of impirtant information that is teaching me about the history of policing in the US. The 4th Chapter is about police brutality (focusing mainly on the high ratio of brutalized black to brutalized whit citizens) from pre-WWI through the 20th century. Leaves 21st century mostly to the next chapter. 6y
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