Everyday Erinyes #171

 Posted by at 2:35 pm  Politics
Jun 222019
 

Experts in autocracies have pointed out that it is, unfortunately, easy to slip into normalizing the tyrant, hence it is important to hang on to outrage. These incidents which seem to call for the efforts of the Greek Furies (Erinyes) to come and deal with them will, I hope, help with that. As a reminder, though no one really knows how many there were supposed to be, the three names we have are Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. These roughly translate as “unceasing,” “grudging,” and “vengeful destruction.”

Since Juneteenth was this week, and I forgot to recognize it, and others have said they weren’t aware of it, I thought it might be a good time to do a little back story on it, and this article from The Conversation does a pretty good job with explaining why it matters – and how African-American independence is tied to the criminal justice system
=============================================================

Juneteenth: Freedom’s promise is still denied to thousands of blacks unable to make bail

Black men occupy a disproportionate share of prison cells in the U.S.
sakhorn/Shutterstock.com

Matthew Larson, Wayne State University

June 19 marks Juneteenth, a celebration of the de facto end of slavery in the United States.

For hundreds of thousands of African-Americans stuck in pretrial detention – accused but not convicted of a crime, and unable to leave because of bail – that promise remains unfulfilled. And coming immediately after Father’s Day, it’s also a reminder of the loss associated with the forced separation of families.

On a very personal level, I know how this separation feels. Every Father’s Day since 2011, I’ve been reminded of the unexpected death of my dad at the age of 48. But also on a professional level, as a criminologist who has been researching mass incarceration for the past decade, I understand the disproportionate impact it’s had on African-Americans, destabilizing black families in the process.

Blacks behind bars

Juneteenth is a celebration of African-Americans’ triumph over slavery and access to freedom in the U.S., which occurred in Galveston, Texas, in June of 1865, over two and a half years after President Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation.

While Juneteenth is a momentous day in U.S. history, it is important to appreciate that the civil rights and liberties promised to African-Americans have yet to be fully realized. As legal scholar Michelle Alexander forcefully explains, this is a consequence of Jim Crow laws and the proliferation of incarceration that began in the 1970s, including the increase of people placed in pretrial detention and other criminal justice policies.

There are 2.3 million people currently incarcerated in American prisons and jails – including those not convicted of any crime. Black people comprise 40 percent of them, even though they represent just 13 percent of the U.S. population.

Protesters march through Harlem in the March for Justice.
Rainmaker Photo/MediaPunch/IPX

Not yet guilty but not free

More troubling is the number of incarcerated individuals currently held in jail for crimes of which they have not yet been convicted.

The Prison Policy Initiative, a nonpartisan think tank that focuses on mass incarceration, has reported that over a half million citizens are languishing in pretrial detention. And like most criminal justice outcomes, the burden of this disproportionately falls on minorities, especially black men and women.

In local jails alone, over 300,000 people are awaiting trial for property, drug or public order crimes. And again, these disproportionately black defendants are confined and separated from their families, friends and jobs simply because they lack the means to post cash bail – the only reason they can’t get out.

Toll on families

It should be no surprise, then, that 1 in 9 black children now has a parent behind bars, compared with the national rate of 1 in 28.

And many of these children are at an increased likelihood of experiencing physical and mental health issues, academic struggles and a range of other behavioral problems. Children of incarcerated mothers are also at heightened odds of ending up in foster care and being exposed to other traumas.

Being the partner of an incarcerated individual is another often stressful experience that also falls disproportionately on black citizens, particularly women.

Some good news

The good news is that such injustices are receiving growing attention nationwide.

Just City, a nonprofit organization working to reduce the harms of the criminal justice system, has campaigned to raise funds and promote awareness of its Memphis Community Bail Fund project for Father’s Day – in part because nearly half a million of the black men behind bars are dads.

The aim of the project is to provide both financial and legal support for defendants lacking resources to independently secure their pretrial release, with the goal of the campaign being the release of jailed fathers so that they could be with their kids for the holiday.

Bail funds similar to Just City’s have proliferated throughout the U.S.

On one hand, the multiplication of these organizations is encouraging and reason for optimism. On the other, their growth is another reminder that many of the freedoms celebrated on Juneteenth remain unrealized.

A long road continues

In cities like Detroit, where 1 in 7 adult males is under some form of correctional control in some communities, it is a monumental task to make sense of the short- and long-term impacts of incarceration for black families.

Children suffer. Parents struggle. Relationships deteriorate. And as a result, so too do so many African-American communities. Lost wages matter to families, but they also matter to communities. The lower tax base that results makes it more difficult for struggling public institutions, like schools, to progress. And with such a large share of individuals removed from some communities due to incarceration, and branded as felons upon their release, these communities lose potential voters and the political capital they carry. They are too often disenfranchised and stripped of their full power and potential.

Juneteenth celebrates the freedom of black Americans and the long, hard road they were forced to traverse to gain that freedom. But as criminologists like me have maintained time and again, the U.S. criminal justice system remains biased, albeit implicitly, against them.The Conversation

Matthew Larson, Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice, Wayne State University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

==============================================================
Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone, please join activists in helping to equalize our criminal justice system so the free people can actually live in freedom.

And for all of us who want to share the Juneteenth message with people we know who may never have heard of it, let alone know anything about it, here’s a video – three minutes long – which may help to make it more easily sharable.

The Furies and I will be back.

Cross posted to Care2 HERE.

Share

  6 Responses to “Everyday Erinyes #171”

  1. IMHO abolishing the Prison-Industrial Complex, ending mass incarceration and using prisons for only vicious convicts, and getting rid of cash bail or replacing it with a system that does not discriminate against the poor will do more for people of color than reparations. Then again, I am writing as a white person – I mean, one who is melanin-challenged.

    • I see reparations as including a variety of programs, and I don’t think limiting ourselves to just one is the right approach.  Like you, I see large reforms to the criminal justice system as critical, and I think that should be one form of reparations.  (I also think reparations are due not just for slavery but for all insidious forms of racism which have never gone away.)  I’m melanin-challenged too.  Just not blind, any more than you are.

  2. Just another reason I luvs me some Elizabeth Warren: Sen. Warren is for BANNING the odious private prisons for profit!

    https://www.cnn.com/2019/06/21/politics/elizabeth-warren-ban-private-prisons-detention-facilities/index.html

  3. Thanks and Amen to everything you said. 04

  4. Great informative post, Joanne.
    We must be made aware of the deep racism that is still prevalent today, and to learn from our mistakes from the past. Education is important, and to be able to cross the barriers that black folks have endured for years. That also applies to the insidious prisons for $$$ !!!! debacle. Sad.
    Thank you, too, for spreading this awareness. 

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.