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Progressive Punishment - Job Loss, Jail Growth, and the Neoliberal Logic of Carceral Expansion (Hardcover)
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Progressive Punishment - Job Loss, Jail Growth, and the Neoliberal Logic of Carceral Expansion (Hardcover)
Series: Alternative Criminology
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Winner, 2017 American Society of Criminology's Division on Critical
Criminology and Social Justice Best Book Award An examination of
the neoliberal politics of incarceration The growth of mass
incarceration in the United States eludes neat categorization as a
product of the political Right. Liberals played important roles in
both laying the foundation for and then participating in the
conservative tough on crime movement that is largely credited with
the rise of the prison state. But what of those politicians and
activists on the Left who reject punitive politics in favor of
rehabilitation and a stronger welfare state? Can progressive
policies such as these, with their benevolent intentions,
nevertheless contribute to the expansion of mass incarceration? In
Progressive Punishment, Judah Schept offers an ethnographic
examination into the politics of incarceration in Bloomington,
Indiana in order to consider the ways that liberal discourses about
therapeutic justice and rehabilitation can uphold the logics,
practices and institutions that comprise the carceral state. Schept
examines how political leaders on the Left, despite being critical
of mass incarceration, advocated for a "justice campus" that would
have dramatically expanded the local criminal justice system. At
the root of this proposal, Schept argues, is a confluence of
neoliberal-style changes in the community that naturalized prison
expansion as political common sense among leaders negotiating
crises of deindustrialization, urban decline, and the devolution of
social welfare. In spite of the momentum that the proposal gained,
Schept uncovers resistance among community organizers, who
developed important strategies and discourses to challenge the
justice campus, disrupt some of the logics that provided it
legitimacy, and offer new possibilities for a non-carceral
community. A well-researched and well-narrated study, Progressive
Punishment offers a novel perspective on the relationship between
liberal politics, neoliberalism, and mass incarceration.
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