Ten Years After “The New Jim Crow” - a podcast by WNYC Studios and The New Yorker

from 2020-01-20T12:00

:: ::

The United States has the largest prison population in the world. But, until the publication of Michelle Alexander’s book “The New Jim Crow,” in 2010, most people didn’t use the term mass incarceration, or consider the practice a social-justice issue. Alexander argued that the increasing imprisonment of black and brown men—through rising arrest rates and longer sentences—was not merely a response to crime but a system of racial control. “The drug war was in part a politically motivated strategy, a backlash to the civil-rights movement, but it was also a reflection of conscious and unconscious biases fuelled by media portrayals of drug users,” Alexander tells David Remnick. “Those racial stereotypes were resonant of the same stereotypes of slaves and folks during the Jim Crow era.”

Further episodes of The New Yorker: Politics and More

Further podcasts by WNYC Studios and The New Yorker

Website of WNYC Studios and The New Yorker