cxcarlislevilas's review against another edition

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informative

4.5

dawsonthehughes's review against another edition

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5.0

I didn’t read every chapter of the book, only the ones assigned for class, but this book was still INCREDIBLY informative

margaretefg's review against another edition

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4.0

Incredibly detailed, thorough recounting of the rise of mass incarceration from the Kennedy administration through Reagan's War on Drugs. Hinton demonstrates over and over again how policies that emphasized potential criminals effectively criminalized entire low-income African American communities and created criminal records and more crime. The book is exhaustively researched and includes some wonderful anecdotes, especially during the Nixon administration which "fought" crime while actively engaging in all kinds of criminal activity.

ekatkoz's review

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slow-paced

3.0

sbb42's review

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challenging dark informative reflective slow-paced

5.0

scylla87's review

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informative slow-paced

2.75

cl1ch3's review against another edition

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5.0

An excellent treatment of this history of the entanglement of crime and poverty in the United States, guided by racist attitudes.

lucasmiller's review against another edition

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5.0

This is a particular type of of big important history book. I think it is much easier to appreciate and study then to enjoy.

Hinton is a very gifted scholar who is part of a new generation of historians that are doing really important work. She has been mentored by people like Robin D.G. Kelly and Eric Foner. She has the research and writing chops. It's all there.

This book is a brick. The text runs 340 pages, but it doesn't feel brisk. It swings for the fences with its thesis that the foundation of Mass Incarceration begins with the War on Crime legislation put forward by LBJ as part of the Great Society. To my knowledge this pushes back the development of the Age of Mass Incarceration from the Reagan Era to 20 years earlier in the heart of the Liberal Hour of American social policy. This is shocking, exciting, and well argued.

It's a chore to get through the book. To read with a study group, a class, or in sections is advisable I think. It was overly ambitious to assign this to High School juniors who are learning at home during quarantine, but they are hanging in there.

It's well structured and lends itself to gutting/dipping into. I jumped over some of the extended examples in the later chapters, but still feel like I read this book. An essential for the history shelf. One I'll go back to.

mattrohn's review against another edition

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informative medium-paced

5.0

 Best book I've read so far this year. The research, writing, argument, and good cutout examples are all there. Worth reading both for its content and as an example of how to put a great book length research project together 

mg_1133's review

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challenging emotional informative sad slow-paced

4.0