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Mass Incarceration Retards Racial Integration
The title of this post is the title of this recent working paper authored by Peter Temin for the Institute for New Economic
Thinking. Here is its abstract:
President Nixon replaced President Johnson’s War on Poverty with his War on Drugs in 1971. This new drug war was expanded by President Reagan and others to create mass incarceration. The United States currently has a higher percentage of its citizens incarcerated than any other industrial country. Although Blacks are only 13 percent of the population, they are 40 percent of the incarcerated. The literatures on the causes and effects of mass incarceration are largely distinct, and I combine them to show the effects of mass incarceration on racial integration. Racial prejudice produced mass incarceration, and mass incarceration now retards racial integration.
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ஒன்றுபட்டது-மாநிலங்களில்
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The New Deal and Recovery, Part 12: Fear Itself SHARE This great Nation will endure as it has endured, will revive and will prosper. …[T]he only thing we have to fear is fear itself. FDR, in his first inaugural address. There is no place for industry; because the fruit thereof is uncertain. Thomas Hobbes, on the state of nature, in
Leviathan.
Not the Sum of its Parts
So far, I ve tended to look at the New Deal as a set or sequence of distinct government policies and programs, remarking on how each either contributed to or hampered economic recovery. I ve also dealt only with those New Deal policies generally understood to have had promoting recovery as their aim.
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