Draft #4 of Research Paper
Abstract
In the United States, there are the highest number of prisoners in the entire world. Of those prisoners, minorities seem to be a trend. Were there factors other than the crime committed that resulted in a minority out behind bars? Things such as race, income and level of education were researched as a possible explanation as to why these individuals are prisoners. Race is a more accurate conclusion as to why this is occurring. Articles used in this paper convey that African American individuals are the most targeted group of people in the United States in regards to mass incarceration. The research in this paper proves that minorities are targeted because of the way they look and the prejudice that conveys people to convict these individuals without enough evidence to convict them.
Are Minorities Only Incarcerated for Their Crimes or Are There Other Motives?
Freedom should be a right obtained by everyone in the U.S. This right should not be taken away by anyone because of their race. Although many scenarios can lead someone to the predicament of prison, things someone can’t change shouldn’t be one of the reason why. Minorities in the U.S are a large percentage of the prison population and are overrepresented when it comes to poverty, faulty education and social injustice. Targets of incarceration seem to be a reoccurring pattern. Minorities in the United States are preyed upon in society and waited on to commit crimes in order to become a statistic. Their crimes are looked past upon when their skin is a different color, when their race seems alarming, and when their background defies norms. Although crimes are committed, there are existing reasons why minorities, especially African Americans, are more likely to end up behind bars.The basic meaning of mass incarceration is when a large number of people are sent to prison. Like Garland mentioned “Mass imprisonment implies a rate of imprisonment and a size of prison population that is markedly above the historical and comparative norm for societies of this type” (2001). Mass incarceration is something that occurs greatly in the United States. According to (DeFina, Hannon, 2013), “During the past 30 years, incarceration rates have risen by more than 300%”. The War on Drugs was one of the causes of mass incarceration starting around the late 1980’s. Laws made in order to decrease crime and drug use worked in the eyes of the law, but the results of these laws were deteriorating communities. Akubiec, Kilcer, Sager stated “The largest impact from the War on Drugs is by far the isolation and classification of minorities as second-class citizens” (2009, pg.1).
With America’s racist past, many believe that race correlates to mass incarceration. Of course, the War on Drugs had a more negative effect on black communities. The NAACP mentioned “Largely a function of the “War on Drugs” which began in the 1980s, incarceration is one of the most serious racial inequities in current U.S. society. African-Americans now constitute almost one-half of the 2.3 million prison/jail population; they are incarcerated at nearly a rate nearly six times that of Whites”. The statistics show that because the War on Drugs brought even more racial inequality into society, incarceration amongst African Americans increased greatly. This is a clear representation of not only racism, but profiling. This proves that if an African American individual and a White man commit the same crime, the person of color will receive a much harsher sentence just because of the difference in race.
This infographic depicts the statistics of incarceration between different races. One can also see that women and Hispanics are included in this graphic because they too are a minority and are all included in the U.S population. The ratio is significantly different when it comes to black men and white men and it has to do with the authority that arrest and process these men. Several times, police officers are ordered to bring someone into their precinct and in order to fulfill their job, they sought mainly after people of color because of prejudice.
Level of education is another factor as to why minorities are more likely to become victims of mass incarceration. If one dismisses school and decides to involve themselves in activity on the streets, they’re more likely to be admitted into a juvenile center or even jail. Wald and Losen stated that “Minorities are heavily overrepresented among those most harshly sanctioned in schools. Nationally, black students are 2.6 times as likely to be suspended as white students” (Wald, Losen. 2003). In the School to Prison Pipeline, children who are oppressed in schools tend to perform unsatisfactory. In the cartoon, students are automatically being placed in jail because their public-school education is not sufficing for them to continue their education. When schools are not getting an efficient amount of funds, the poor education and lack of motivation leads students to a life of crime. Many low funded schools are placed in neighborhoods with individuals who have low-income, a large majority being African American and Hispanic; this makes a new generation of potential prisoners.
Wrongful convictions are the reason why many minorities are in prison, especially Black men. Throughout history, it has become frequent that when a crime is committed and a potential suspect is indescribable or in many cases not even seen, a black man is blamed for the crime. Often times, the Black men accused of these so called committed crimes are innocent. America’s past has led people to believe that the tall, Black, dark-skinned man is a criminal. Prejudice against people of darker skin has always been prominent. Unless one is a celebrity or a sportsman, people’s judgement will get the best of them and think that they’ll get their purse stolen by everyone who looks like that. The crime that a number of many black men are wrongly incarcerated for is sexual assault, specifically white women. A famous case showcasing this is The Scottsboro Case, where nine young boys were accused of sexually assaulting two white women. Almost all of them were sentenced to death until one of the white women confessed saying that, in fact, nothing had occurred between the boys and them. An older lady’s persistence to have them jailed and killed kept the case going. It was not until the Supreme Court decided to reverse any decisions regarding the boys’ fate. If the U.S Supreme Court would have never intervened, a white woman’s word would have been taken over nine invisible voices just because of her race. Predisposition at trial is outlined by the direction issued by Judge Callahan: “There is a very strong presumption under the law that she [a White woman] would not and did not yield voluntarily to intercourse with the defendant, a Negro” (Sommerville, 2004, p. 217). In many instances this is the case, that a white woman would never engage in sexual relations with a Black man, but in many cases, Black men are convicted for a crime they did not commit.
Mass incarceration leaves behind a number of different effects for the individuals incarcerated and their families. There are, of course, the obvious effects of incarceration; losing a job, losing a house, and not being able to provide for a family. Prisoners though develop psychological issues due to the time away from their families and the hostile environment that their placed in that can lead to severe trauma. DeVeaux mentioned “Several researchers found that people in prison may be diagnosed with posttraumatic stress disorders, as well as other psychiatric disorders, such as panic attacks, depression, and paranoia” Over time, mental illness from one individual, for example an incarcerated father, can be triggered in their child due to the life situation they’re in.
References
DeFina, R., & Hannon, L. (2013). The Impact of Mass Incarceration on Poverty. Crime & Delinquency, 59(4), 562-586. doi:10.1177/0011128708328864
Garland, D. (2001). Mass imprisonment: social causes and consequences. London: Sage.
Jakubiec, David; Kilcer, Andrew; and Sager, William, " The War on drugs" (2009). RIT: College of Liberal Arts 2009, Retrieved from h p://scholarworks.rit.edu/article/1662
Johnson, M. B., Griffith, S., & Barnaby, C. Y. (2013). African Americans Wrongly Convicted of Sexual Assault Against Whites: Eyewitness Error and Other Case Features. Journal Of Ethnicity In Criminal Justice, 11(4), 277-294. doi:10.1080/15377938.2013.813285
NAACP (n.d.). Criminal justice fact sheet. Retrieved from http://www.naacp.org/pages/criminal-justice-fact-sheet
Sommerville, D. M. (2004). Rape and race in the nineteenth-century south. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.
Wald, J. and Losen, D. J. (2003), Defining and redirecting a school-to-prison pipeline. New Directions for Youth Development, 2003: 9–15. doi:10.1002/yd.51
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