被打断的生活:美国被监禁的母亲

R. Solinger
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在美国,反监狱运动是一个日益壮大的积极分子阵线,部分原因是这些数字令人震惊,而且越来越糟。出于这个原因,我们很难避免从数字开始。例如,根据司法统计局的数据,2001年,每10万美国居民中就有470名囚犯。四年后,尽管维权活动激增,但在2005年,每10万名居民中有488名囚犯。在全国范围内,现在被关押在州、联邦监狱和地方监狱的妇女人数是1980年的8倍多。这意味着美国大约有20万被监禁的女性。但是,如果你把所有形式的惩教监督——缓刑、假释、监狱、州和联邦监狱——都算上,现在有100多万女性被关在监狱里或受到刑事司法系统的控制。最近,监狱实际成本项目(RCPP)报告称,“美国每109名妇女中就有一人被监禁、假释或缓刑。”RCPP提供了更多的数据,数据显示美国的监禁与种族有关。这些数字是令人震惊和决定性的:虽然非洲裔美国人占美国人口的13%,占吸毒者的13%,但因毒品相关犯罪而被捕的人中有35%是非洲裔美国人,55%的人因毒品相关犯罪而被定罪
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Interrupted Life: Incarcerated Mothers in the United States
The anti-prison movement in the United States is a growing activist front, partly because the numbers are so shocking and getting worse. It's hard to avoid beginning with the numbers for just that reason. For example, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, in 2001, there were 470 inmates for every 100,000 U.S. residents. Four years later, despite the surge of activism, in 2005, there were 488 inmates per 100,000 residents. Nationally there are now more than eight times as many women incarcerated in state and federal prisons and local jails than there were in 1980. That means there are approximately 200,000 incarcerated women in the United States. But if you count all forms of correctional supervision probation, parole, jail, and state and federal prison, more than one million women are now behind bars or under the control of the criminal justice system. Recently, the Real Cost of Prisons Project (RCPP) reported, "one out of every 109 women in America is incarcerated, on parole or probation." RCPP provides more numbers, figures showing us that incarceration in America is about race. These numbers are stunning and determinative: While African Americans make up 13% of the population, and 13% of the drug users in the United States, 35% of people arrested for drug-related crimes are African Americans, 55% of people convicted for drug-related
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