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引用次数: 23
摘要
本文探讨了刑事司法系统对那些间接经历它的人的政治影响:通过加强警察监视、逮捕、缓刑/假释和监禁而陷入刑事司法系统的个人的朋友和大家庭,学者们称之为“监禁公民”(Lerman和Weaver 2014, 8)。与刑事司法系统的接触在美国越来越普遍,美国监禁的公民比任何其他西方民主国家都多(West, Sabol, and Greenman 2010)。除了目前关押在监狱里的230万人之外,学者们估计有超过1900万人犯有重罪(Uggen, Manza, and Thompson, 2006)。23%的黑人成年人有犯罪背景,拉丁裔占联邦囚犯的50%,凸显了美国刑事司法中极端的种族差异(Meissner et al. 2013)。越来越多的研究探讨刑事司法接触对政治参与的影响,发现选民投票率的下降是一个人是否被监禁、被捕或生活在高接触社区的结果(Burch 2011, 2013;Lerman and Weaver 2014)。
For Love and Justice: The Mobilizing of Race, Gender, and Criminal Justice Contact
This paper examines the political implications of the criminal justice system for those who experience it indirectly: the friends and extended families of individuals who become caught up in the criminal justice system through heightened police surveillance, arrest, probation/parole and incarceration, which scholars have termed “custodial citizenship” (Lerman and Weaver 2014, 8). Contact with the criminal justice system is increasingly common in the United States, which incarcerates more of its citizens than any other western democracy (West, Sabol, and Greenman 2010). In addition to the 2.3 million people currently behind bars scholars estimate that more than 19 million have a felony (Uggen, Manza, and Thompson 2006). Fully 23% of Black adults have a criminal background, and Latinos make up 50% of federal inmates, highlighting extreme racial disparities in American criminal justice (Meissner et al. 2013). A growing body of research explores the impact of criminal justice contact on political participation finding that depressed voter turnout is the result whether one has been incarcerated, arrested, or lives in a high-contact community (Burch 2011, 2013; Lerman and Weaver 2014).