cartcart

    Malign Neglect: Race, Crime, and Punishment in America

     
    Only 1 items left in stock
    Malign Neglect: Race, Crime, and Punishment in America

    Description

    Despite the perennial claims of politicians that our courts are coddling hardened criminals, the fact is that America already sends a higher proportion of its citizens to prison--and for longer terms--than any other western nation. To quote the Canadian House of Commons's Committee on Justice,
    "If locking up those who violate the law contributed to safer societies, then the United States should be the safest country in the world." Yet despite well-documented and mounting evidence that increased penalties alone cannot reduce crime, the Reagan and Bush administrations repeatedly lobbied for
    tougher mandatory sentences and more prisons. Although black crime rates have been stable for twenty years, the number and percentages of blacks in jail and prison have skyrocketed since Ronald Reagan took office. The trend continues with President Clinton, who recently called for "three strikes
    you're out" legislation dictating mandatory life sentences for third felony convictions.
    In Malign Neglect, Michael Tonry addresses these paradoxes with passion and lucidity. Drawing on a vast compendium of the latest statistical, legal and social science research, he takes on the explosive issues of race, crime and punishment. As unconventional as he is committed, Tonry confronts
    uncomfortable truths head-on. On the one hand, he is outraged by politicians' talk of Willy Horton and Welfare Queens. The texts may be crime and welfare, Tonry writes, but the subtext is race. While he recognizes that the disadvantaged have no license to attack, rape or steal, and that the
    absolution of disadvantaged offenders would require a cynical acceptance of the suffering of victims, he argues powerfully thatcrime control policies can be recast so that, without diminishing public safety, they do less harm to disadvantaged black Americans. Tonry presents devastating evidence
    that our current policies are decimating black communities, and impeding the movement of disadvantag

    Product details

    EAN/ISBN:
    9780195104691
    Medium:
    Paperback
    Number of pages:
    252
    Publication date:
    1996-04-11
    Publisher:
    Oxford University Press, U.S.A.
    EAN/ISBN:
    9780195104691
    Medium:
    Paperback
    Number of pages:
    252
    Publication date:
    1996-04-11
    Publisher:
    Oxford University Press, U.S.A.

    Shipping

    laposte
    The edition supplied may vary.
    Condition
    Condition
    Learn more
    €2.33
    available immediately
    New €18.63 You save €16.30 (87%)
    €2.33
    incl. VAT, plus  Shipping costs
    paypalvisamastercardamexcartebleue
    • Icon badgeChecked second-hand items
    • Icon packageFree shipping from €19
    • Icon vanWith you in 2-4 working days