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I'm torn about how to rate this book. On the one hand, it's well researched, engaging to read, and highlights an important social issue: mass incarceration and the way that underlying racism impacts the criminal justice system, particularly with regard to the "War on Drugs". On the other hand, as critics have pointed out, the book seems to ignore major economic and social factors in making its argument. The book almost entirely ignores the violence associated with mass incarceration and with dru
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The New Jim Crow is a difficult book for me to review and so I’m going to go at it a bit differently than I would the usual review.
Primary Personal Response:
I have experienced the devastation of the system when trying to enter mainstream society after legal difficulties by helping a young man I taught who was homeless. He was never in trouble for a drug crime (but could have been), but had a felony from his middle school years on his record for a fight in which rocks were thrown, his did some d ...more
Primary Personal Response:
I have experienced the devastation of the system when trying to enter mainstream society after legal difficulties by helping a young man I taught who was homeless. He was never in trouble for a drug crime (but could have been), but had a felony from his middle school years on his record for a fight in which rocks were thrown, his did some d ...more

Nov 01, 2014
Kathleen (itpdx)
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
non-fiction,
lwv-book-group
This is an important book. And I think this book is beginning to change the dialog of the civil rights movement. NPR author interview. Michelle Alexander tells about the impact of the War on Drugs on African American men in the United States. How the United States became the country that imprisons the largest percentage of its residents. How over half of the African American men in many of our large cities are in the control of the justice system--prison/probation/parole creating a racial underc
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I should have read this five years ago, but glad I finally made the time. Some quotations that indicate my big takeaways:
"If we had actually learned to show love, care, compassion, and concern across racial lines during the Civil Rights Movement--rather than go colorblind--mass incarceration would not exist today."
"Race plays a major role--indeed a defining role--in the current system, but not because of what is commonly understood as old-fashioned, hostile bigotry. This system of control depend ...more
"If we had actually learned to show love, care, compassion, and concern across racial lines during the Civil Rights Movement--rather than go colorblind--mass incarceration would not exist today."
"Race plays a major role--indeed a defining role--in the current system, but not because of what is commonly understood as old-fashioned, hostile bigotry. This system of control depend ...more

Dec 21, 2013
Amy W
marked it as to-read

Apr 05, 2015
Lindsay
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May 16, 2015
Megan
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Sep 22, 2015
Tracy Stansbury
marked it as to-read

Oct 02, 2016
Athira (Reading on a Rainy Day)
marked it as to-read
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
nonfiction,
nf-sociology

Nov 13, 2016
Jane
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Dec 30, 2016
Jennifer AM
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Lynda
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Teddie
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