Deadly Symbiosis
Race and the Rise of the Penal State
Polity Press
2015
Présentation de l'éditeur
This outstanding book explores the rise of prison populations in
the US, in Britain and in other European countries, as well as in
Latin America. Beginning with a rich, ethnographic account of being
inside the Men’s Central Jail in Los Angeles, the author
moves on to develop an argument about the connections between
neoliberalism as a political doctrine, and incarceration as a
social policy.
Loïc Wacquant reveals that the growing symbiosis between
politics, the media, immigration and penal institutions are
transforming the definition, treatment and representation of crime,
justice and citizenship not only in the United States but also in
Europe and Latin America.
In the age of unfettered markets and enfeebled social-welfare
states, the penal system is a major engine of social
stratification, urban change and cultural demarcation in its own
right. It remakes those segments of the city onto which it latches
in its own image, turning them into devices for the expurgation of
dispossessed groups and the symbolic destruction of important urban
ills.
Deadly Symbiosis is a timely book, which offers a
rigorous and engaging account of why the penal system must be put
at the centre of social inquiry, political reflection and civic
action today.
Loïc Wacquant is Professor of Sociology at the University of California-Berkeley and Researcher at the Centre de sociologie européenne-Paris.
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