Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Racial Inequality, Social Policy and Prisons: 1980-2000 Glenn C. Loury, Merton P. Stoltz Professor of the Social Sciences Brown University.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Racial Inequality, Social Policy and Prisons: 1980-2000 Glenn C. Loury, Merton P. Stoltz Professor of the Social Sciences Brown University."— Presentation transcript:

1 Racial Inequality, Social Policy and Prisons: 1980-2000 Glenn C. Loury, Merton P. Stoltz Professor of the Social Sciences Brown University

2 A Radical Transformation of Policy

3 States’ Prison Spending Grows faster than Higher Ed According to a 2002 report of the Justice Policy Institute (Washington, DC): “During the 1980s and 1990s, state spending on corrections grew at 6 times the rate of state spending on higher education, and by the close of the 1990’s, there were nearly a third more African American men in prison and jail than in universities or colleges.”

4 Coloring the Terms of Membership: Reinventing the Divided Citizenry in an Era of Neoliberal Paternalism Joe Soss & Sanford F. Schram

5 Public Policy and Racial/Ethnic Disparities Distributive Disparities: who gets more or less, and why Civic Disparities: how groups are positioned in relation to one another and vis-à-vis major societal institutions The Social Question: How can solidarity (or inclusive and equal membership) be achieved in a society divided by ethnic identities as well as material inequalities? How do public policies organize governance and define terms of membership for different social groups?

6 Civic Incorporation as a Goal of Poverty Policy Europe Unemployment and welfare dependence as problems of “social exclusion” Labor activation as a strategy for incorporation into the societal “mainstream” United States (The New Paternalism) Social dysfunction, behavioral pathology, and personal disorganization as sources of societal marginality “Telling the Poor What to Do” (Help and Hassle) –Directive, supervisory, and punitive policies –Supports to enable preferred behavior

7 Race and Civic Disparities in the History of Public Aid Mothers’ Pensions White Republican Motherhood, Assimilation of Immigrants, Exclusion of Blacks and Latinas Social Security Act of 1935 (ADC) White male breadwinner: full citizen incorporated into national social insurance State and local public aid: regulating labor markets, gender roles, and racial caste War on Poverty (1960s) Meaningful legal citizenship for racial minorities Racial conflict promoted and undermined poverty efforts

8 The New Poverty Governance: Change in Numbers Incarcerated and Receiving Cash Aid:1990-2000

9 Result Is Disparate Positioning in the TANF Program: Exposure to Program Features by Race of Family, 2001

10 Effects are Cumulative: Stringency of Policy Regime by Race of Family, 2001

11 Not Just Rule Exposure, Also Local Implementation 1. Racial Disparities in Sanctioning across Length of Spell 2. Race-Specific Mediation by Local Political Environment

12 Mid-1960s: a policy long racialized in practice becomes racialized in media coverage and in the public mind Correlation: r =.03 (1950-65) r =.68 (1966-96)

13 Race Matters: The Effect of Black Caseload Percentage on Welfare Policy Choices in an “Average State”

14 A Huge Racial Disparity of Policy Impact

15 Size/Racial Composition of Overall Correctional System

16 Growing Extent of Correctional Supervision

17 Racial Disparity in Incarceration: 1982-2001

18 Incarceration and HIV Transmission

19 What if no racial disparity in incarceration? (Men)

20 What if Black Incarc. fixed at 1980 Level? (Men)

21

22 What if no racial disparity in incarceration? (Women)

23 What if Black Incarc. fixed at 1980 Level? (Women)

24 Impact of W.O.D. on Imprisonment

25 Drug Arrests in Chicago

26 How Effective Has the W.O.D. Been?

27 Drug Prices, Emergency Treatment and Incarceration Rates: 1980-2000

28 The Social Integration Gap


Download ppt "Racial Inequality, Social Policy and Prisons: 1980-2000 Glenn C. Loury, Merton P. Stoltz Professor of the Social Sciences Brown University."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google