Fr. 170.40

Punishment and Inclusion - Race, Membership, and the Limits of American Liberalism

English · Hardback

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Description

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At the start of the twenty-first century, 1 percent of the U.S. population is behind bars. An additional 3 percent is on parole or probation. In all but two states, incarcerated felons cannot vote, and in three states felon disenfranchisement is for life. More than 5 million adult Americans cannot vote because of a felony-class criminal conviction, meaning that more than 2 percent of otherwise eligible voters are stripped of their political rights. Nationally, fully a third of the disenfranchised are African American, effectively disenfranchising 8 percent of all African Americans in the United States. In Alabama, Kentucky, and Florida, one in every five adult African Americans cannot vote.

Punishment and Inclusion gives a theoretical and historical account of this pernicious practice of felon disenfranchisement, drawing widely on early modern political philosophy, continental and postcolonial political thought, critical race theory, feminist philosophy, disability theory, critical legal studies, and archival research into state constitutional conventions. It demonstrates that the history of felon disenfranchisement, rooted in postslavery restrictions on suffrage and the contemporaneous emergence of the modern "American" penal system, reveals the deep connections between two political institutions often thought to be separate, showing the work of membership done by the criminal punishment system and the work of punishment done by the electoral franchise.

Felon disenfranchisement is a symptom of the tension that persists in democratic politics between membership and punishment. This book shows how this tension is managed via the persistence of white supremacy in contemporary regimes of punishment and governance.

List of contents

Preface Acknowledgments 1 A Productive Injustice 2 Fabricating Figures 3 Neoliberal Penality and the Biopolitics of Homo OEconomicus 4 To Kill a Thief 5 Innocent Citizens, Guilty Subjects 6 Punishing at the Ballot Box 7 Civic Disabilities 8 (Re)figuring Justice Coda Notes Bibliography Index

About the author










Andrew Dilts

Summary

This book gives a theoretical and historical account of felon disenfranchisement, showing deep connections between punishment and citizenship practices in the United States. These connections are deployed quietly and yet perniciously as part of a political system of white supremacy, shaping contemporary regimes of punishment and governance.

Product details

Authors Andrew Dilts
Publisher Fordham University Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 15.09.2014
 
EAN 9780823262410
ISBN 978-0-8232-6241-0
No. of pages 352
Series Just Ideas (FUP)
Just Ideas
Just Ideas
Subject Social sciences, law, business > Political science > Political science and political education

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