Law in Contemporary Society

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MassIncarceration 3 - 20 Feb 2012 - Main.ShakedSivan
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 I thought it would be useful to consolidate a conversation that's going on in the class facebook group. The material is interesting, important, and relates to our discussions in this class (most obviously regarding Robinson and his work). Hopefully it will also allow us to procrastinate from finishing torts or con law reading. I apologize for the scattershot nature of this post. I may go back and do more editing / summarizing of the links below if there's any interest or this sparks a discussion. Of course I welcome any interested person to do likewise, or just jump off from one of the articles or points and run with it.

A New Yorker article on mass incarceration that provides something of a historical overview. "The Caging of America" by Adam Glopnik, 1/30/2012.

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 2) A second argument ("Southern"), one that appears often in discussions of mass incarceration, is that our prison system stems from white superiority -"mass imprisonment became a way of re-imposing Jim Crow."
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3) Glopnik reviews a new book, "The City That Became Safe," by Franklin Zimring. The book argues that the precipitous fall in the crime rate in NYC over the past few decades did not arise because of mass incarceration but because of "small acts of social engineering, such as "hot-spot policing" and, controversially, the use of "stop and frisks."
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3) Glopnik reviews a new book, "The City That Became Safe," by Franklin Zimring. The book argues that the precipitous fall in the crime rate in NYC over the past few decades did not arise because of mass incarceration but because of "small acts of social engineering," such as "hot-spot policing" and, controversially, the use of "stop and frisks."
 4) Glopnik argues that the deterrent effect is very weak, so very few nonviolent offenders should be in jail.

Revision 3r3 - 20 Feb 2012 - 19:46:40 - ShakedSivan
Revision 2r2 - 20 Feb 2012 - 00:47:33 - ShakedSivan
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