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The Perils of Federalism - Race, Poverty, and the Politics of Crime Control (Hardcover)
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The Perils of Federalism - Race, Poverty, and the Politics of Crime Control (Hardcover)
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In the past dozen years, a number of American cities plagued by gun
violence have tried to enact local laws to stem gun-related crime.
Yet policymakers at the state and federal levels have very
frequently stymied their efforts. This is not an atypical
phenomenon. In fact, for a whole range of pressing social problems,
state and federal policymakers ignore the demands of local
communities that suffer from such ills the most. Lisa L. Miller
asks, how does America's multi-tiered political system shape crime
policy in ways that empower the higher levels of government yet
demobilize and disempower local communities? After all, crime has a
disproportionate impact on poor and minority communities, which
typically connect crime and violence to broader social and economic
inequities at the local level. As The Perils of Federalism
powerfully demonstrates, though, the real control to set policy
lies with the state and federal governments, and at these levels
single-issue advocates--gun rights groups as well as prison,
prosecutorial and law enforcement agencies--are able to shape
policy over the heads of the people most affected by the issue.
There is a tragic irony in this. The conventional wisdom that
emerged from the Civil Rights era was that the higher levels of
government--and the federal level in particular--best served the
disadvantaged, while localities were most likely to ignore the
social problems resulting from racial and economic inequality.
Crime policy, Miller argues, teaches us an opposite lesson: as
policy control migrates to higher levels, the priorities of
low-income minority communities are ignored, the realities of
racial and economic inequality are marginalized, andcitizens lose
their voices. Taking readers from the streets of Philadelphia to
the halls of Congress, she details how and why our system operates
in the way that it does. Ultimately, the book not only challenges
what we think about the advantages of relying of federal power for
sensible and fair solutions to longstanding social problems. It
also highlights the deep disconnect between the structure of the
American political system and the ideals of democratic
accountability.
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