Discrimination in The New Jim Crow Essay

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    the rate of Whites. But, the real injustice starts when former convicts are released from jail and are labeled as felons. In The New Jim Crow, Michelle Alexander claims that felons show the same loss of liberty as African-Americans living under Jim Crow laws in Alabama. Felons, especially those who are African American, are treated similar to colored people under Jim Crow because of the loss of rights among felons, the stigma of former offenders in society, and…

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    unlike the language used to justify Jim Crow or slavery. Instead the criminal justice system labels blacks as criminals, thereby justifying the application of discriminatory practices. The effect of sigma also operates differently in the era of mass incarceration. During Jim Crow, racial stigma contributed to racial, but today the sigma of black criminality has created a deep shame in the black community, “destroying networks of support and creating silence about the new caste system among the…

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    Since America is the land of the free, why do people of color live under oppression? From the 1880s to the 1960s, America had enforced by the Jim Crow laws(Nps), which caused segregation. The laws were simply put in place so that one race felt more superior to the other; in this case whites believed that they were more human than African-Americans. Jim Crow laws lasted for 80 years, during that time it stopped most interactions between both races there had separate hospitals,…

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    Jim Crow Laws began in the 1880s a little after Reconstruction, and ended in the1960s. Southern state legislatures passed laws requiring the separation of whites from African Americans in public transportation and school. The laws were also put in place to restrict African Americans from having any part in what goes on in the government. This meant that when it came time to vote for anything only white men could vote. Jim Crow Laws, were state and local laws enforcing racial segregation in the…

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    However, the book was poorly accomplished. I am an academic; I know my rights. The New Jim Crow is important information to add to my intellectual coffers, however it is not essential to my livelihood. Therefore as I read, I asked why a book that should be written for the disenfranchised is written at a college level. A novel with the purpose…

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    Summary: The New Jim Crow

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    Alexander, Michelle. “The New Jim Crow.” The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness. 178-220. New York, NY: The New Press, 2011. Print. This book chapter was written by Michelle Alexander, a successful civil rights litigator and advocate for racial justice. In this chapter Alexander talks about the War on Drugs, racial discrimination, the stigmatization of African American men, housing discrimination, poverty, the rights that felons lose after incarceration, the…

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    Plessy V Ferguson

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    The first major legal challenge of the Jim Crow laws was the Supreme Court case Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) for his removal from the car on a train all the way to the high court, which ultimately decided that "separate but equal" accommodations for African Americans and whites weren't discriminatory. The US Supreme Court ruled that under the Constitution (14th and 15th Amendments) African Americans had political rights, but social rights were not required. According to the court, as long as…

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    more Americans in jail protecting us from being threatened in our homes and streets? Or are people being shoved into jail cells because they look like they “don’t belong” and fit a certain category. In the book, Jail by John Irwin and in The New Jim Crows by Michelle Alexander, citizens are angry and fed up with tolerating with unfear treatment when it comes to crimes. In both books, it states that people are put into jail and prison to make society a better place and to distance those who are…

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    Americans were the first people to experience the effects of the Great Depression. The Black Shirts, a Klan-like group in Atlanta Georgia, paraded and held signs that stated "No jobs for niggers until every white man has a job." (The Rise and Fall of Jim Crow; The Great Depression). African Americans were beaten and killed because they had jobs. It was believed that whites should hold jobs, and not blacks. Anti-black violence took place in the 1920s. Lynchings increased in the South. Lynching is…

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    The essence of her arguments are captured in the concepts within three chapters of her book. These meaningful concepts include: The Round Up, The Conviction, and The Label which all lead into The New Jim Crow. Even though the…

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