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OverviewOver the last several years, we have experienced a surge in bystander videos of incidents of police brutality directed largely at Black men. Public outrage surrounding police action continues to increase. As public discourse around police brutality and racial inequality largely centers on specific events, there is less information within the public discourse about systemic racism and how race and racism pervade every single aspect of American life. The ways in which Black people are often treated by law enforcement is reflective of larger historical racial inequities and injustices that extend far beyond the criminal justice system and intersect with how Black people access housing and occupy public spaces. Imprisoned focuses on contemporary systemic racism as it relates to the ways in which our criminal justice system intersects with our housing system to create a matrix of inequality. To illustrate the systemic nature of racism in American policing and communities, this book highlights the policies and practices that were put in place during slavery and after Reconstruction that connect to instances of structural racism in contemporary America. This book demonstrates how foundational policies in American history continue to work to the detriment of Black Americans—tying the racist foundations of America to discrimination in our criminal justice system and neighborhoods. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Cassi A. Meyerhoffer , Brittany Leigh RodriguezPublisher: University of Georgia Press Imprint: University of Georgia Press Weight: 0.386kg ISBN: 9780820364223ISBN 10: 0820364223 Pages: 277 Publication Date: 30 November 2023 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsA significant contribution to the study of racial and ethnic relations, Imprisoned will greatly assist readers in understanding the complexity of race relations in the United States. It also demonstrates that U.S. policing reform would need to consider entanglements with historically labeling black bodies as ‘criminal’ and the practice of segregating and patrolling black bodies very differently than any other racial and ethnic group in America."" - Cameron D. Lippard, coeditor of Protecting Whiteness: Whitelash and the Rejection of Racial Equality ""Imprisoned makes an important contribution to the sociological literature on race and ethnicity, the criminal justice system, urban sociology, and racial residential segregation."" - Rachelle J. Brunn-Bevel, coeditor of Intersectionality and Higher Education Imprisoned makes an important contribution to the sociological literature on race and ethnicity, the criminal justice system, urban sociology, and racial residential segregation. --Rachelle J. Brunn-Bevel coeditor of Intersectionality and Higher Education A significant contribution to the study of racial and ethnic relations, Imprisoned will greatly assist readers in understanding the complexity of race relations in the United States. It also demonstrates that U.S. policing reform would need to consider entanglements with historically labeling black bodies as 'criminal' and the practice of segregating and patrolling black bodies very differently than any other racial and ethnic group in America.--Cameron D. Lippard coeditor of Protecting Whiteness: Whitelash and the Rejection of Racial Equality A significant contribution to the study of racial and ethnic relations, Imprisoned will greatly assist readers in understanding the complexity of race relations in the United States. It also demonstrates that U.S. policing reform would need to consider entanglements with historically labeling black bodies as 'criminal' and the practice of segregating and patrolling black bodies very differently than any other racial and ethnic group in America. - Cameron D. Lippard, coeditor of Protecting Whiteness: Whitelash and the Rejection of Racial Equality Imprisoned makes an important contribution to the sociological literature on race and ethnicity, the criminal justice system, urban sociology, and racial residential segregation. - Rachelle J. Brunn-Bevel, coeditor of Intersectionality and Higher Education Author InformationCassi Meyerhoffer is an associate professor of sociology at Southern Connecticut State University and the editor of Race: Identity, Ideology, and Inequality. Brittany Leigh Rodriguez is a Latinx woman currently working as the director of Scholar Success at Hartford Youth Scholars, a non-profit, college-access organization located in Hartford, CT. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |