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Justice In America

Episode 9: How Democrats and Republicans Created Mass Incarceration

Justice In America

The Appeal

News, Politics, Prison, Law, Criminal, Justice, Jail, History, Education, Incarceration, America

4.81K Ratings

🗓️ 19 September 2018

⏱️ 49 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

There are a few schools of thought regarding the origins of mass incarceration. Some blame Reagan and his” war on drugs,” while others blame Bill Clinton’s 1994 Crime Bill. Meanwhile, movies like Ava Duvernay’s 13th have drawn the direct parallels between slavery, Jim Crow, and our racist incarceration system. Each of these theories is correct, at least in part. Yes, it is undoubtedly true that mass incarceration cannot be divorced from prior systems of racial subjugation in America. And yes, Reagan and Clinton helped to perpetuate mass incarceration.

But in her book From the War on Poverty to the War on Crime, our guest Elizabeth Hinton, a professor of History and African American studies at Harvard, argues that the modern roots of mass incarceration can be traced even further back, to president Lyndon B. Johnson. Johnson, a Democrat, is famous for helping usher in key Civil Rights victories, from the Voting Rights Act to the Civil Rights Act. And he spent much of his tenure fighting for low-income Americans, implementing a series of domestic policies that he called the War on Poverty. But he also pushed for harsher punishments and a larger law enforcement presence, particularly in communities of color. Under Johnson, the federal government started pouring tons of money into local law enforcement, which gave them the tools they needed to lock up millions of people.

On this episode, we discuss how both parties helped perpetuate mass incarceration in the years immediately following the Civil Rights movement. We also discuss why it is that, during the 70s and 80s, black elected officials were some of the most ardent supporters of mass incarceration.

Professor Hinton joins us to talk about how both Democrats and Republicans are responsible for the mass incarceration system we have today.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

If we really want to kind of understand how we get the kind of deep seated insidious inequality and racism that pervades our society today, then it requires us to look at the ways in which even the best intended policies are marred by

0:20.0

racist notions in general.

0:22.0

And I think a lot of it has to do with the kind of

0:24.5

narratives that we like to tell both academic ones as historians but also kind of

0:29.8

of in the public imagination about what the 1960s was and the achievements of the 1960s. What's going on everyone? I'm Clint Smith. And I'm Josie Duffy Rice. And this is Justice in America. Each show we discuss a topic in the American criminal justice system and try to explain what it is and how it works.

0:54.8

Thank you everyone for joining us today.

0:56.8

You can find us on Twitter at Justice underscore Podcast.

1:00.0

You can like our Facebook page.

1:01.8

You can just find us at Justice in America and you should subscribe and rate us on iTunes

1:06.3

please we'd love to hear from you.

1:08.3

We started the show with a clip from our guest Dr Elizabeth Hinton who's a professor of

1:12.1

history and African American studies at Harvard University.

1:14.8

She's also the author of From the War on Poverty to the War on Crime, which argues that our mass incarceration

1:20.1

apparatus largely stems from policies implemented in the 60s by the Johnson

1:24.6

administration. So we are almost at the end of our season and we've talked about a

1:29.0

lot bail, plea deals, voting rights, prosecutors, and prosecutor elections,

1:34.5

crimigration, women with incarcerated loved ones,

1:37.6

many other topics and tangents.

1:40.3

And what we realize is that we've talked a lot

1:42.3

about how things are, but what we haven't talked about is how they got this way.

1:47.0

We haven't really talked about how we got here.

1:50.0

And by we, we mean America, and by here we mean with this mass incarceration system.

...

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