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Journal ArticleDOI

Imprisoning Communities: How Mass Incarceration Makes Disadvantaged Neighborhoods Worse

George E. Tita
- 01 Mar 2009 - 
- Vol. 38, Iss: 2, pp 151-153
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TLDR
Refugee Children: Towards the Next Horizon as discussed by the authors is a rich and sophisticated resource for scholars and practitioners interested in the experience of forced migrants in general and refugee youth in particular.
Abstract
refugee children, Watters’ book provides more generally significant insights into a wide array of issues relevant to contemporary refugees. Rather than concentrating on those who receive refugee status from host societies, Watters asserts “the focus of this book is not restricted to legal and administrative definitions of refugee children, but instead accords with what Zolberg has referred to as a ‘sociological’ definition ‘grounded in observable social realities’” (p. 2). In addition, Watters draws extensively from contemporary theorists of inequality, exclusion and domination—Michel Foucault, Aihwa Ong, Pierre Bourdieu, Homi Bhabha, Liisa Malkki among them—to create a refined appreciation of the ways that states and bureaucracies affect refugees’ understandings of themselves, their social position and their ability to act in their own interest. Refugee Children is based upon the analysis of refugees in several (mostly European) countries of settlement, including Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, France and especially the U.K., which according to the author is regarded by many stateless persons as the most desirable point of settlement. In addition, the book examines populations originating from and travelling through multiple world regions. Drawing from his own research as well as his reviews of journalistic and academic literature, Watters gives readers numerous first-hand accounts of the settings, interactions and assistance programs that refugee youth encounter. The author carefully attends to the origins of refugees, considering their history, religion and cultural background. Based on this, he questions both the assimilationist approach to refugee resettlement that would compel recent arrivals into the acceptance of host society practices in order to facilitate access to jobs and health care, as well as multicultural models that see refugees as inextricably immersed in the cultural and religious patterns of their country of origin, and as such, fundamentally unlike persons native to the host society. Championing neither, he regards both as paternalistic and potentially limiting to refugee children’s ability to make choices based upon their own outlooks, goals and understandings. In a like manner, Watters assesses models of resettlement in terms of their allocation of resources. He critiques both tight-fisted programs that fail to provide minimal levels of support as well as therapeutic regimes that assume all forced migrants to be deeply wounded and as such, in immediate need of culturally alien and sometimes unwanted rehabilitation. Despite its impressive scholarship, Refugee Children: Towards the Next Horizon is not simply an exercise in academic analysis. Rather, it offers valuable information with many practical examples drawn from successful programs devoted to refugee youth. If there is one downside to this book, it is that the volume is so rich in theories, examples, case studies, suggestions for practice and evaluations of the political and ethical implications of various approaches to working with young refugees, that readers may become overwhelmed. Its scholarly exuberance notwithstanding, Refugee Children: Towards the Next Horizon is a thought-provoking and sophisticated resource for scholars and practitioners interested in the experience of forced migrants in general and refugee youth in particular. The book does an impressive job of filling the conceptual, contextual and theoretical gaps that have, until recently, limited the breadth and quality of research on forced migrants.

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BookDOI

The growth of incarceration in the United States: exploring causes and consequences

TL;DR: Part of the courts, criminal law, criminal procedure, criminology, Law and Society Commons, Law Enforcement and Corrections Commons, Legislation Commons, Politics and Social Change Commons, and the Race and Ethnicity Commons.
Journal ArticleDOI

Incarceration and Stratification

TL;DR: In the past three decades, incarceration has become an increasingly powerful force for reproducing and reinforcing social inequalities as discussed by the authors, and a new wave of sociological research details the contemporary experiment with mass incarceration in the United States and its attendant effects on social stratification.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Effects of Parental Imprisonment on Children

TL;DR: The number of children experiencing parental imprisonment is increasing in Western industrialized countries as mentioned in this paper, which is a risk factor for child antisocial behavior, offending, mental health problems, drug abuse, school failure, and unemployment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Drawing Blood from Stones: Legal Debt and Social Inequality in the Contemporary United States

TL;DR: This article analyzed national and state-level court data to assess monetary sanctions and interview data to identify their social and legal consequences, finding that monetary sanctions are imposed on a substantial majority of the millions of people convicted of crimes in the United States annually and that legal debt is substantial relative to expected earnings.
Journal ArticleDOI

Incarceration in fragile families.

TL;DR: It is argued that mass imprisonment may increase future racial and class inequality—and may even lead to more crime in the long term, thereby undoing any benefits of the prison boom.
References
More filters
BookDOI

The growth of incarceration in the United States: exploring causes and consequences

TL;DR: Part of the courts, criminal law, criminal procedure, criminology, Law and Society Commons, Law Enforcement and Corrections Commons, Legislation Commons, Politics and Social Change Commons, and the Race and Ethnicity Commons.
Journal ArticleDOI

Incarceration and Stratification

TL;DR: In the past three decades, incarceration has become an increasingly powerful force for reproducing and reinforcing social inequalities as discussed by the authors, and a new wave of sociological research details the contemporary experiment with mass incarceration in the United States and its attendant effects on social stratification.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Effects of Parental Imprisonment on Children

TL;DR: The number of children experiencing parental imprisonment is increasing in Western industrialized countries as mentioned in this paper, which is a risk factor for child antisocial behavior, offending, mental health problems, drug abuse, school failure, and unemployment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Incarceration in fragile families.

TL;DR: It is argued that mass imprisonment may increase future racial and class inequality—and may even lead to more crime in the long term, thereby undoing any benefits of the prison boom.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mapping the shadow carceral state: Toward an institutionally capacious approach to punishment

TL;DR: The shadow carceral state as discussed by the authors expands penal power through institutional annexation and legal hybridity, including increased civil and administrative pathways to incarceration; the creation of civil alternatives to invalidated criminal statutes; and the incorporation of criminal law into administrative legal processes in ways that enhance state carceral power.
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