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As recently as five years ago mass incarceration was widely
considered to be a central, permanent feature of the political and
social landscape. The number of people in U.S. prisons is still
without historic parallel anywhere in the world or in U.S. history.
But in the last few years, the population has decreased, in some
states by almost a third. A broad consensus is emerging to reduce
prison rolls. Politicians have called for repealing the harshest
sentencing laws of the war on drugs, abolishing mandatory minimums
and closing correctional facilities. Does the decrease in the
prison population herald the dismantling of mass incarceration?
This book provides an answer. Drawing on original research from
across New York State, the contributors argue that while massive
decarceration is taking place, the outcome to date is not the one
wished for by reformers, namely a more just system. While drug law
reform is clearly upon us, for example, a moral panic about heroin
addiction and phantom meth labs has recently reached a fever pitch.
As the penitentiary population drops and prisons close, the number
of people in jail has swelled. New intelligence-led policing, and
the rise of a reentry industry together have led to more
surveillance and less social justice. Together these developments
lead to justice disinvestment as the state sheds direct
responsibility for the criminal justice system to the private and
non-profit sector, while it extends its reach through new forms of
community-based supervision, surveillance and policing into poor
neighborhoods and communities of color. Celebration may be
premature, in other words. Having endowed a group that is already
disproportionately poor and people of color with the stigma of
criminality, the state has left the formerly incarcerated and their
communities to their fate. The future we face appears to be neither
emancipatory reform nor simply the continuation of past mass
incarceration. The challenge of freedom, on a scale not seen since
the Reconstruction, remains before us.
As recently as five years ago mass incarceration was widely
considered to be a central, permanent feature of the political and
social landscape. The number of people in U.S. prisons is still
without historic parallel anywhere in the world or in U.S. history.
But in the last few years, the population has decreased, in some
states by almost a third. A broad consensus is emerging to reduce
prison rolls. Politicians have called for repealing the harshest
sentencing laws of the war on drugs, abolishing mandatory minimums
and closing correctional facilities. Does the decrease in the
prison population herald the dismantling of mass incarceration?
This book provides an answer. Drawing on original research from
across New York State, the contributors argue that while massive
decarceration is taking place, the outcome to date is not the one
wished for by reformers, namely a more just system. While drug law
reform is clearly upon us, for example, a moral panic about heroin
addiction and phantom meth labs has recently reached a fever pitch.
As the penitentiary population drops and prisons close, the number
of people in jail has swelled. New intelligence-led policing, and
the rise of a reentry industry together have led to more
surveillance and less social justice. Together these developments
lead to justice disinvestment as the state sheds direct
responsibility for the criminal justice system to the private and
non-profit sector, while it extends its reach through new forms of
community-based supervision, surveillance and policing into poor
neighborhoods and communities of color. Celebration may be
premature, in other words. Having endowed a group that is already
disproportionately poor and people of color with the stigma of
criminality, the state has left the formerly incarcerated and their
communities to their fate. The future we face appears to be neither
emancipatory reform nor simply the continuation of past mass
incarceration. The challenge of freedom, on a scale not seen since
the Reconstruction, remains before us.
"Making Waves" unearths the successive, worldwide waves of revolts,
rebellions, and revolutions that have shaken and remade the world
from the eighteenth century to the present. It challenges us to
rethink not only our limited conceptions of social movements but
the very character and possibilities of social movements. The
authors show how successive outbursts of global social protest have
undermined world capitalist orders and, through both their
successes and their failures, provided the basis for long periods
of stable capitalist rule across all the zones of the
world-economy. The surprises start in the Age of Revolution, when
the antisystemic wave of slave revolts that led to the Haitian
Revolution is related to the systemic effects of their combination
with the U.S. and French Revolutions. The analysis comes up to the
present, when a wave of post-1989 movements points to quite
divergent futures based, as in the past, on the search for
alternatives to communities organized by capital accumulation,
nation-states, and the accelerating commodification and
fragmentation of human needs, identities, and desires.
"Making Waves" unearths the successive, worldwide waves of revolts,
rebellions, and revolutions that have shaken and remade the world
from the eighteenth century to the present. It challenges us to
rethink not only our limited conceptions of social movements but
the very character and possibilities of social movements. The
authors show how successive outbursts of global social protest have
undermined world capitalist orders and, through both their
successes and their failures, provided the basis for long periods
of stable capitalist rule across all the zones of the
world-economy. The surprises start in the Age of Revolution, when
the antisystemic wave of slave revolts that led to the Haitian
Revolution is related to the systemic effects of their combination
with the U.S. and French Revolutions. The analysis comes up to the
present, when a wave of post-1989 movements points to quite
divergent futures based, as in the past, on the search for
alternatives to communities organized by capital accumulation,
nation-states, and the accelerating commodification and
fragmentation of human needs, identities, and desires.
This volume chronicles the volatile history of the resurgence of
South Africa, once an international pariah, as a respected and
influential African state. Once an international pariah, South
Africa has emerged as a respected and influential African state,
projecting its economic and political power across the continent.
South Africa and the World Economy: Remaking Race, State, and
Region chronicles the volatile history of this resurgence, from the
nation's rise as an industrialized, white state and subsequent
decline as a newly underdeveloped country to its current standing
as a leading member of theGlobal South. Departing from much of the
latest scholarship, which examines South Africa as a discrete
national case, this volume places the country in the global social
system, analyzing its relationships with the colonial powersand
white settlers of the early twentieth century, the costs of the
neoliberal alliances with the North, and the more recent challenges
from the East. This approach offers a bold reinterpretation of
South Africa's developmental successes and failures over the last
century -- as well as clear yet contentious lessons for the
present. William G. Martin is chair of the Department of Sociology
at Binghamton University, coeditor of From Toussaintto Tupac: The
Black International since the Age of Revolution, and coauthor of
Making Waves: Worldwide Social Movements, 1760-2005.
This book, first published in 1992, seeks an explanation of the
pattern of sharp discrepancy of wage levels across the
world-economy for work of comparable productivity. It explores how
far such differences can be explained by the different structures
of households as 'income-pooling units', examining three key
variables: location in the core or periphery of the world-economy;
periods of expansion versus periods of contraction in the
world-economy; and secular transformation over time. The authors
argue that both the boundaries of households and their sources of
income are molded by the changing patterns of the world-economy,
but are also modes of defense against its pressures. Drawing
empirical data from eight local regions in three different zones -
the United States, Mexico and southern Africa - this book presents
a systematic and original approach to the intimate link between the
micro-structures of households and the structures of the capitalist
world-economy at a global level.
This book, first published in 1992, seeks an explanation of the
pattern of sharp discrepancy of wage levels across the
world-economy for work of comparable productivity. It explores how
far such differences can be explained by the different structures
of households as 'income-pooling units', examining three key
variables: location in the core or periphery of the world-economy;
periods of expansion versus periods of contraction in the
world-economy; and secular transformation over time. The authors
argue that both the boundaries of households and their sources of
income are molded by the changing patterns of the world-economy,
but are also modes of defense against its pressures. Drawing
empirical data from eight local regions in three different zones -
the United States, Mexico and southern Africa - this book presents
a systematic and original approach to the intimate link between the
micro-structures of households and the structures of the capitalist
world-economy at a global level.
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