Racial Issues in Criminal Justice: The Case of African Americans
By (Author) Marvin D. Free
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th September 2003
United States
General
Non Fiction
364.08996073
Hardback
288
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
567g
Almost a third of all African American men in their twenties in the United States are in jail or prison, or on probation or parole. African Americans, who comprise approximately 13% of the general population, make up about half of the prison population. Between 1980 and 2000, 38 states added more African American men to their prison systems than were added to their respective systems of higher education. However, these statistics fail to tell the entire story. To understand how the dynamics of disproportionate minority confinement came to exist, one must examine the historical and cultural antecedents that affected (and continue to affect) this group. Examining proposed solutions and providing alternative perspectives, this volume addresses the overrepresentation of African Americans in the criminal justice system by critically examining the significance of race in American society and criminal justice responses to crime and African Americans. Offering a critical examination of the issues, this collection begins with a discussion of the marginalization of African Americans in the academic discipline of criminal justice and in the larger society, an assessment of the impact of the legacy of slavery on private prisons and mass imprisonment, and an empirical examination of the depiction of African Americans in prime-time television crime programs. Part II looks at racial profiling, the underrepresentation of African Americans in hate crime victimization research, the impact of race on presentencing, the trend toward trying juveniles in adult court, and the discriminatory treatment of African Americans in capital-eligible cases. Finally, Part III discusses the impact of African American police officers on the profession, analyzes black juror nullification, proposes an increase in the presence of African American jurors, and assesses the potential ameliorative impact of restorative justice on the current racial imbalance in the criminal justice system.
Early in the 21st century, race continues to be a disturbingly significant criminal justice variable. Free has brought together 14 articles by criminologists exploring the race variable as illustrated by the case of African Americans . . . this volume offers valuable information and insights bearing on one of the principal enduring challenges confronting the U.S. criminal justice systemaddressing more successfully the long, pernicious legacy of racism. Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above. * Choice *
It is important that the author does not just point out that race plays a pivotal part in the American criminal justice system, but he offers possible solutions toward making the criminal justice system live up to ideas of a race value-neutral system that guarantees fundamental fairness and justice for all Americans, specifically African Americans. . . . This book should give undergraduate students an overall understanding of racial issues in the criminal justice system that negatively affect African Americans. * Criminal Justice Review *
Marvin D. Free Jr. is associate professor of Sociology at the University of Wisconsin, Whitewater. He has published extensively in journals such as Critical Criminology, Journal of Black Studies, Deviant Behavior, Youth & Society, Contemporary Justice Review, and the Encyclopedia of Violence, Peace, and Conflict. He is also the author of African Americans and the Criminal Justice System, and the coauthor of Crime, Justice, and Society: Criminology and the Sociological Imagination.