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The Crisis of Imprisonment - Protest, Politics, and the Making of the American Penal State, 1776-1941 (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R1,934
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The Crisis of Imprisonment - Protest, Politics, and the Making of the American Penal State, 1776-1941 (Hardcover, New)
Series: Cambridge Historical Studies in American Law and Society
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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In the Age of Jackson, private enterprise set up shop in the
American penal system. Working hand in glove with state government,
contractors in both the North and the South would go on to put more
than half a million imprisoned men, women, and youth to hard,
sweated toil for private gain by 1900. Held captive, stripped of
their rights, and subject to lash and paddle, convict laborers
churned out vast quantities of goods and revenue, in some years
generating the equivalent of more than $30 billion worth of work.
By the 1880s, however, a growing mass of Americans came to regard
the prison labor system as immoral and unbefitting of a free
republic: it fostered torture and other abuses, degraded free
citizen-workers, corrupted government and the legal system, and
stifled the supposedly ethical purposes of punishment. The Crisis
of Imprisonment tells the remarkable story of this controversial
system of penal servitude: how it came into being, how it worked,
how the popular campaigns for its abolition were ultimately
victorious, and how it shaped and continues to haunt the American
penal system. The author takes the reader into the morally vital
world of nineteenth-century artisans, industrial workers, farmers,
clergy, convicts, machine politicians, and labor leaders and shows
how prisons became a lightning rod in a determined defense of
republican and Christian values against the encroachments of an
unbridled market capitalism. She explores the vexing ethical
questions that prisons posed then and remain exigent today: What
are the limits of state power over the minds, bodies, and souls of
citizens and others is torture permissible under certain
circumstances? What, if anything, makes the state morally fit to
deprive a person of life or liberty? Are prisoners slaves and, if
so, by what right? Should prisoners work? Is the prison a morally
defensible institution? The eventual abolition of prison labor
contracting plunged the prisons into deep fiscal and ideological
crisis. The second half of the book offers a sweeping
reinterpretation of Progressive Era prison reform as, above all, a
response to this crisis. It concludes with an exploration of the
long-range impact of both penal servitude and the anti-prison labor
movement on the modern American penal system."
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