The Law Has a Bad Opinion of Me

Simon Balto
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Abstract

Overlapping chronologically with the preceding chapter, chapter 4 explores a localized “punitive turn” in Chicago’s policing arrangement during the late 1940s and especially in the 1950s. Driven by grassroots pressure from white citizens, the exposure of corruption both politically and within the police department, and the rise of the famed Daley machine, police power and the size of the police department itself both expanded dramatically during this period. Once elected, Daley radically expanded the number of police officers employed by the city. Those officers were also invested with increasing amounts of discretion, leading to the expanded use of stop and frisk and other tools that disproportionately were used against Black citizens. In a department lacking meaningful accountability mechanisms, this increased discretion also led to widespread accusations against police that they were engaged in the illegal detention of citizens and also of torture. The chapter also details the early onset of the urban crisis, especially on the West Side as neighborhoods there transitioned from white to Black, and an early-1950s “war on drugs” that police waged on the Black South Side.
法律对我有不好的看法
第四章按时间顺序与前一章重叠,探讨了20世纪40年代末特别是50年代芝加哥警务安排中的局部“惩罚性转向”。在白人公民的基层压力、政治上和警察部门内部腐败的曝光以及著名的戴利机器的兴起的推动下,警察的权力和警察部门本身的规模在这一时期都急剧扩大。当选后,戴利大幅增加了该市雇用的警察人数。这些警察也被赋予了越来越多的自由裁量权,导致拦截搜身和其他工具的使用扩大,这些工具不成比例地用于黑人公民。在一个缺乏有意义的问责机制的部门中,这种自由裁量权的增加也导致对警察的广泛指控,称他们非法拘留公民并实施酷刑。这一章还详细描述了城市危机的早期开始,特别是在西区,那里的社区从白人变成了黑人,以及20世纪50年代初警察在黑人居住区南区发动的“毒品战争”。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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