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Getting Tough - Welfare and Imprisonment in 1970s America (Paperback)
Loot Price: R557
Discovery Miles 5 570
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(16%)
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Getting Tough - Welfare and Imprisonment in 1970s America (Paperback)
Series: Politics and Society in Modern America
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List price R660
Loot Price R557
Discovery Miles 5 570
You Save R103 (16%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The politics and policies that led to America's expansion of the
penal system and reduction of welfare programs In 1970s America,
politicians began "getting tough" on drugs, crime, and welfare.
These campaigns helped expand the nation's penal system, discredit
welfare programs, and cast blame for the era's social upheaval on
racialized deviants that the state was not accountable to serve or
represent. Getting Tough sheds light on how this unprecedented
growth of the penal system and the evisceration of the nation's
welfare programs developed hand in hand. Julilly Kohler-Hausmann
shows that these historical events were animated by struggles over
how to interpret and respond to the inequality and disorder that
crested during this period. When social movements and the slowing
economy destabilized the U.S. welfare state, politicians reacted by
repudiating the commitment to individual rehabilitation that had
governed penal and social programs for decades. In its place, they
championed strategies of punishment, surveillance, and containment.
The architects of these tough strategies insisted they were
necessary, given the failure of liberal social programs and the
supposed pathological culture within poor African American and
Latino communities. Kohler-Hausmann rejects this explanation and
describes how the spectacle of enacting punitive policies convinced
many Americans that social investment was counterproductive and the
"underclass" could be managed only through coercion and force.
Getting Tough illuminates this narrative through three legislative
cases: New York's adoption of the 1973 Rockefeller drug laws,
Illinois's and California's attempts to reform welfare through
criminalization and work mandates, and California's passing of a
1976 sentencing law that abandoned rehabilitation as an aim of
incarceration. Spanning diverse institutions and weaving together
the perspectives of opponents, supporters, and targets of punitive
policies, Getting Tough offers new interpretations of dramatic
transformations in the modern American state.
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