
Contents
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Criminal Justice and the American State Criminal Justice and the American State
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The Capacity and Function of the State The Capacity and Function of the State
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Social Provisions and “Punishing the Poor” Social Provisions and “Punishing the Poor”
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The Character of American Governance The Character of American Governance
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Criminal Justice and the American Citizen Criminal Justice and the American Citizen
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Criminal Justice and Democratic Citizenship Criminal Justice and Democratic Citizenship
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Representation and Aggregate Effects Representation and Aggregate Effects
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Further reading Further reading
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References References
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30 The Carceral State and American Political Development
Get accessAmy E. Lerman is assistant professor of politics and public affairs at Princeton University.
Vesla M. Weaver is assistant professor of political science and African-American studies at Yale University.
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Published:01 July 2014
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Abstract
Since mid-century, the capacity of the United States to punish and surveil its citizenry has undergone tremendous expansion. Yet this phenomenal transformation and its repercussions for citizens has engendered surprisingly little discussion among scholars of American political development (APD). Nor have criminal justice scholars been sufficiently attentive to the intersection between democratic development and the carceral state. In this essay, we highlight how several well-worn tools and concepts in APD have begun to pave new understandings in criminal justice. Many of the studies we describe here have profound consequences for how we see American democracy and citizenship today. They require us to attend to the fact that criminal justice is not just one more slice of the American institutional landscape, but is in fact central to the development of the modern American state, its political order, and how the state interacts with its citizens.
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