Find This Book
"An eye-opening report about how the United States, with just 5 percent
of the world's population, holds 25 percent of the world's incarcerated
population. Ferguson (Law, Literature and Criticism/Columbia University;
Alone in America: The Stories that Really Matter, 2013, etc.) charges
that American prisons have "become an evil for all concerned." Federal,
state and local governments spend $80 billion per year on a system that
provides jobs for one out of nine state employees. In order to promote
the system's growth, private prison companies, as well as the unions
representing guards, have become a self-serving lobby wielding their
clout over political decision-makers. As one example, Louisiana's
privatized, for-profit system holds one out of every 86 of the state's
citizens: three times more than in Iran, seven times more than in China
and 10 times more than in Germany. The numbers jailed and the severity
of the sentences-- including life without parole for nonviolent
crimes--are no longer comparable to any of the countries that are peers
and allies of the U.S. Overcrowding risks unrest, and financial costs
have outgrown available revenue. Ultimately, writes Ferguson, U.S.
prison policy has reached a breaking point. The author puts much of the
blame on the politicians whose legislation brought about this state of
affairs, and he calls their political desires "the punitive impulse in
American society." He wants to know whether it is reversible, noting
that it's "simply a fact that voters promote to high office those
politicians who want tougher penalties." Ferguson dates the origins of
this current, nearly intractable situation to a knee-jerk response to
widespread urban riots 50 years ago. An important wake-up call about an
emerging crisis that threatens to become a human rights scandal of
global proportions."(Kirkus Reviews)
Current Affairs
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment