This article looks at the issue of incarceration with a focus on the number of African Americans both male and female who are now incarcerated in the United States. The article takes an analytical perspective in reviewing the fact that the majority of African Americans in the prison population are not there for violent crimes, but yet, African Americans contribute to the mass color of incarceration. The article also includes discussion on how the “so-called” justice systems has treated African Americans unfairly when charged with the same criminal offenses as those of the majority population. The paper also addresses the issue of whether or not mass incarceration of African American men is an “institutional” means for decreasing the African American population in the United States.
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Research Article|
January 01 2017
The Color of Mass Incarceration
Ronnie B. Tucker, Sr.
Ronnie B. Tucker, Sr.
Shippensburg University
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Ethnic Studies Review (2017) 37-38 (1): 135–149.
Citation
Ronnie B. Tucker; The Color of Mass Incarceration. Ethnic Studies Review 1 January 2017; 37-38 (1): 135–149. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/esr.2017.37_38.1.135
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