Racial Formation in the United States (Omi and Winant)
Racial Justice Project of the ACLU
racial profiling: and ghetto communities; litigation challenging; and minority police officers; and police decision making; studies of; and Title VI of 1964 Civil Rights Act; traffic stops/ pedestrian stops
radical philosophy of race relations (Reconstruction era)
rap music and hip-hop culture
Reagan, Ronald/Reagan administration; and conservative revolution in the Republican Party; and crack cocaine; financial incentives to law enforcement; legislation and drug policy; and military policing; racialized campaign rhetoric on crime and welfare; and War on Drugs
reality television shows, black-themed
Reconstruction Era; convict leasing and forced labor; federal civil rights legislation; philosophies of race relations; Populist movement; and racial segregation; Southern “Redemption” campaign; voting rights
Rector, Ricky Ray
“Redemption” campaign
redistricting and prison populations
Reeves, Jimmie
Reform Act (2000)
Reinarman, Craig
Republican Party
Rice, Condoleezza
Robert Taylor Homes (Chicago)
Robinson, Jo Ann Gibson
Roosevelt, Franklin D.
Rucker, Perlie
Rucker v. Davis
Ruffin v. Commonwealth (Virginia)
Runoalds, Clifford
Russell, Kathryn
San Francisco Ban the Box campaigns
San Jose Mercury News
Schmidt, Benno
Schneckloth v. Bustamonte
Schwarzer, William W.
Scott, Donald
search and seizure
Seattle Police Department
segregation, racial; and ghetto communities; and prisons; Reconstruction Era; and re-entry of ex-felons; residential segregation
sentencing: and crack cocaine; and juveniles; and mandatory minimums; and plea bargaining; reform efforts; Supreme Court rulings and racially discriminatory sentencing
Sentencing Project
Sharpton, Al
Shelby, Tommie
“shooter bias,”
Sider, Gerald
Siegel, Reva
slavery; birth of; and disenfranchisement of black voters; and history of race discrimination in jury selection; and notion of white supremacy; and plantation labor; and poor whites; postemancipation period; and role of racial hostility/racial indifference; and symbolic production of race; and U.S. Constitution
Slavery by Another Name (Blackmon)
Smith, Mary Louise
Smith v. Allwright (1944)
Souter, Justice David H.
Southern Center for Human Rights
“Southern Manifesto,”
Southern Strategy
Spruill, Alberta
States of Denial (Cohen)
Steinberg, Stephen
Stevens, Justice John Paul
Stewart, Emma Faye
stigma of criminality; and black youth; coping strategies and lying; and families of prisoners /ex-felons; and “gangsta culture,”; self-hate in the black community; shame and silence; and symbolic production of race
The Strange Career of Jim Crow (Woodward)
Stratford High School (Goose Creek, South Carolina)
structural racism
Stutman, Robert
Supreme Court rulings: crack cases and discriminatory sentencing; and “drug-courier profiles,”; drug-law enforcement and claims of racial bias; and end of Jim Crow system; Fourth Amendment decisions; jury selection; and majoritarian political process; and mandatory sentencing laws; police searches and seizures; police traffic stops; police use of lethal chokeholds; and post-arrest legal representation; and prosecutorial discretion in drug-law enforcement; and public housing; race as factor in police decision making; and racial profiling; and racially discriminatory sentencing. See also names of individual cases
Swain v. Alabama
Swank, Eric
SWAT (Special Weapons and Tactics) teams
Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF)
Terry v. Ohio
Thinking About Crime (Tonry)
Thirteenth Amendment
Thomas, James
“three strikes” laws
Time magazine
Title VI of the Civil Rights Act (1964)
Tonry, Michael
Torres, Gerald
traffic stops; and broad discretion for police; consent searches; drug forfeiture laws and seizures; and “drug-courier profiles,”; and Fourth Amendment; and police training programs; pretext stops
Travis, Jeremy
Tulia drug sting operation (1999)
unemployment
United Nations Human Rights Committee
United States v. Brignoni-Ponce
United States v. Reese
Urban League report “The State of Black America” (1990)
U.S. Sentencing Commission
USA Today
Vera Institute
Village Voice
voting rights: disenfranchisement of ex-felons; and Fifteenth Amendment; Jim Crow era disenfranchisement; Reconstruction Era; restoration processes for ex-felons
Voting Rights Act (1965)
Wacquant, Loïc
Walker, Herman
Wallace, George
War on Drugs; George H.W. Bush administration; Clinton administration; conspiracy theories; and crack cocaine; early resistance within law enforcement; federal agencies’ antidrug funding; financial incentives to law enforcement; and genocide; and inner-city economic collapse; internalization of; media campaigns; myths of; Reagan administration. See also War on Drugs and the criminal justice system
War on Drugs and the criminal justice system; arguments that race has always influenced the criminal justice system; and court system; and drug forfeiture laws; “drug-courier profiles,”; financial incentives; and Fourth Amendment; guilty pleas/ plea bargaining; legal services /legal representation; mandatory minimum sentencing; paramilitary raids and police SWAT teams; pretext stops; and racial discrimination; traffic stops. See also mass incarceration system; police/police departments and drug-law enforcement; post-prison release (ex-offenders)
War on Poverty
Washington, Booker T.
Washington Post
Watson, Tom
We Won’t Go Back (Matsuda and Lawrence)
Weaver, Vesla
Weaver, Warren
Weinstein, Jack
“welfare queens,”
welfare reform legislation
Western, Bruce
Western Area Narcotics Task Force (WANT)
When Work Disappears (Wilson)
“Where Have the Black Men Gone?” (2006 Ebony article)
White Citizens’ Councils
“white crime,”
White House Office of National Drug Control
whites: and colorblindness; drug arrests/imprisonment; and drug-law enforcement; and drunk driving awareness campaigns; end of Jim Crow and Southern whites’ backlash; ex-offenders; illegal drug use; poor and working-class; and racial privilege; and racial profiling in police traffic stops; shift in racial attitudes/support for antidiscrimination principles; victims of racial caste system; “white crime,”; youth drug crimes/ illegal drug use
Whren, Michael
Whren v. United States
Why We Can’t Wait: Reversing the Retreat on Civil Rights (October 2007 conference)
Wideman, John Edgar
Williams, John Bell
Wilson, William Julius
Winant, Howard
Winfrey, Oprah
Wolff, Paula
Womack, Willa
women, African American: conflicted views about crime; and gender gap; and service-sector employment
Woodward, C. Vann
World War II
Yick Wo v. Hopkins
/> Young, Iris Marion
© 2010 by Michelle Alexander
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, in any form, without written permission from the publisher.
Request for permission to reproduce selections from this book should be mailed to: Permissions Department, The New Press, 38 Greene Street, New York, NY 10013.
Published in the United States by The New Press, New York, 2010 Distributed by Perseus Distribution
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Alexander, Michelle.
The new Jim Crow : mass incarceration in the age of colorblindness / Michelle Alexander. p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
eISBN : 978-1-595-58530-1
1. Criminal justice, Administration of—
United States. 2. African American prisoners—United States. 3. Race discrimination—
United States. 4. United States—Race relations. I. Title.
HV9950.A437 2010
364.973—dc22 2009022519
The New Press was established in 1990 as a not-for-profit alternative to the large, commerical publishing houses currently dominating the book publishing industry. The New Press operates in the public interest rather than for private gain, and is committed to publishing, in innovative ways, works of educational, cultural, and community value that are often deemed insufficiently profitable.
www.thenewpress.com
Composition by NK Graphics
This book was set in Fairfield LH Light
The New Jim Crow Page 39