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The Men of Mobtown

Policing Baltimore in the Age of Slavery and Emancipation

Adam Malka

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The University of North Carolina Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Geschichte

Beschreibung

What if racialized mass incarceration is not a perversion of our criminal justice system's liberal ideals, but rather a natural conclusion? Adam Malka raises this disturbing possibility through a gripping look at the origins of modern policing in the influential hub of Baltimore during and after slavery's final decades. He argues that America's new professional police forces and prisons were developed to expand, not curb, the reach of white vigilantes, and are best understood as a uniformed wing of the gangs that controlled free black people by branding them—and treating them—as criminals. The post–Civil War triumph of liberal ideals thus also marked a triumph of an institutionalized belief in black criminality.

Mass incarceration may be a recent phenomenon, but the problems that undergird the "new Jim Crow" are very, very old. As Malka makes clear, a real reckoning with this national calamity requires not easy reforms but a deeper, more radical effort to overcome the racial legacies encoded into the very DNA of our police institutions.

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Schlagwörter

The Laws of Slavery, Early American Cities, Household Authority, Civil War Emancipation, Workingmen, Baltimore, The Problem of Freedom, Wage Freedom, Manhood and Masculinity, Border States, Black Criminality, White Power, Police Brutality, The Early Republic, Property Rights, Policing, Freedpeople, Slavery and Emancipation, Black Incarceration, Vigilante Violence, Mobs, Prisons, Liberalism in America, Policemen, The Liberal State, African Americans, Householders