The status and prospects of African-Americans in contemporary
society are of immense significance. They speak both to the
conscience of the society and to ominous social and political
portends. Involving issues of essential fairness and social justice
are the practical problems of widespread poverty, unemployment, and
the pervasive lack of opportunity stemming from stinted education.
The stage is set for a national program of basic institutional
reforms addressing the root causes of the African-American
community's often analyzed but uncorrected economic, political, and
social problems.
The authors make a convincing argument that the emphases for
solutions to the widespread social conditions gripping the
African-American population need to be on the social processes that
so victimize this segment of the nation's citizenry. They see
societal institutions as capable of furthering or retarding
progress not only in the economic order but also in its
interactions with the political and criminal justice systems.
Income disparities, lack of access to higher education, political
exclusion, and unequal treatment in criminal justice administration
are all seen as contributing to the characteristic institutional
neglect or flawed program application. The authors make a
compelling case for reform not only in the interest of social
justice but for the assurance of a more productive and cohesive
society.
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