
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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Lethal Violence and the Americas Lethal Violence and the Americas
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Theories of Homicide and the State Theories of Homicide and the State
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Fragmentation, Fractionalisation, and Violence Fragmentation, Fractionalisation, and Violence
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Weak Social Policy and Muscular Criminal Justice in the USA Weak Social Policy and Muscular Criminal Justice in the USA
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Appendix A Appendix A
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Appendix B Appendix B
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References References
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6 American Exceptionalism or Exceptionalism of the Americas? The Politics of Lethal Violence, Punishment, and Inequality
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Published:January 2021
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Abstract
‘American exceptionalism in imprisonment’ has become a useful heuristic for analyzing the extremely high rates of imprisonment in the United States that emerged in the late 20th century. This perspective, however, has largely marginalized violent crime as an important and distinguishing feature of the United States in contrast to most of the (largely western) countries to which it is usually compared. But violent crime in the United States – particularly murder – is extraordinarily high, making violence almost as exceptional as imprisonment. In fact, American exceptionalism may be better understood as exceptionalism of the Americas. By linking crime, punishment, and inequality, the relevant comparisons for the United States look less like Europe and more like Latin America. This chapter develops a conceptual framework for understanding state-building in the Americas, which the author refers to as racialized state-building. This framework proposes that the roots of high violence in the Americas (from both fellow citizens and from the state) lie in the fragmented state capacity and accountability that characterize the vast majority of countries in the Americas, including the United States. These state features are a function of extractive, settler, and slave colonialism which created incentives – to varying degrees – for elites to avoid institutional configurations that would result in power-sharing across populations. The resultant states are institutionally disjointed and excessively complex with high levels of mistrust and inequality, conditions which are ripe for violence in many forms.
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