Black Silent Majority: The Rockefeller Drug Laws and the Politics of Punishment

Awards:   Nominated for J. David Greenstone Book Prize 2016 Nominated for James Willard Hurst Prize 2016 Nominated for Littleton-Griswold Prize 2016 Winner of Herbert H. Lehman Award 2016
Author:   Michael Javen Fortner
Publisher:   Harvard University Press
ISBN:  

9780674743991


Pages:   368
Publication Date:   01 September 2015
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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Black Silent Majority: The Rockefeller Drug Laws and the Politics of Punishment


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Awards

  • Nominated for J. David Greenstone Book Prize 2016
  • Nominated for James Willard Hurst Prize 2016
  • Nominated for Littleton-Griswold Prize 2016
  • Winner of Herbert H. Lehman Award 2016

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Michael Javen Fortner
Publisher:   Harvard University Press
Imprint:   Harvard University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 21.00cm
Weight:   0.590kg
ISBN:  

9780674743991


ISBN 10:   0674743997
Pages:   368
Publication Date:   01 September 2015
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional and scholarly ,  General/trade ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Reviews

A fresh, bold, powerful book that shakes up a pressing contemporary debate. Fortner insists on listening to the black voices that supported the rise of our terrible incarceration policies. Through careful research, he describes a deeply conflicted community confronting crime, groping for respectability, challenging the white gaze, and reaching for social justice. <i>Black Silent Majority</i> is forcefully argued, beautifully written, and profoundly moving.--James A. Morone, author of <i>Hellfire Nation</i> and <i>The Devils We Know</i>


This provocative history alerts a rising generation of would-be reformers the young masses that have recently filled the streets of New York and other cities to protest after each new tragedy to how a well-intentioned proposal can lead to something unintended and disastrous, like mass incarceration. This lesson should resound, given the political clout the criminal-justice-reform movement continues to acquire.--Jack Dickey Time (10/12/2015)


Meticulously researched, engagingly written, and rigorously argued, this important and long-overdue work will be essential reading for anyone concerned with the hidden complexities of African American life. Fortner illuminates the problems that the majority of working- and middle-class blacks face from criminal elements within their communities; the sometimes patronizing indifference of white and black liberals toward them, compounded by the manipulation of their concerns by conservatives; and the tragic, unintended consequences of a flawed drug and penal policy they were driven, out of despair and fury, to support. This is a major contribution to our understanding of the interaction of class, race, and public policy in America. -- Orlando Patterson, Harvard University A fresh, bold, powerful book that shakes up a pressing contemporary debate. Fortner insists on listening to the black voices that supported the rise of our terrible incarceration policies. Through careful research, he describes a deeply conflicted community-confronting crime, groping for respectability, challenging the white gaze, and reaching for social justice. Black Silent Majority is forcefully argued, beautifully written, and profoundly moving. -- James A. Morone, author of <i>Hellfire Nation</i> and <i>The Devils We Know</i> This provocative history alerts a rising generation of would-be reformers-the young masses that have recently filled the streets of New York and other cities to protest after each new tragedy-to how a well-intentioned proposal can lead to something unintended and disastrous, like mass incarceration. This lesson should resound, given the political clout the criminal-justice-reform movement continues to acquire. -- Jack Dickey * Time * Seeks to reverse the conventional wisdom about not only the Rockefeller laws themselves, but also the broader history of the war on drugs... After Black Silent Majority, historians can no longer reduce the '60s and '70s politics of crime to the delusional fantasies of racists or to statistical artifacts of modern police record-keeping (although those factors surely played a role as well). Fortner marshals an array of poll data showing that black city dwellers were-and not without reason-far more fearful of violence in the late 1960s than white suburbanites were. -- Sara Mayeux * Reason * Provocative... As Fortner's book makes clear, no political movement can afford to ignore the kind of cruel disorder that we euphemistically call common crime. A police force that kills black citizens is adding to America's history of racial violence; so is a police force that fails to keep them safe. -- Kelefa Sanneh * New Yorker *


Meticulously researched, engagingly written, and rigorously argued, this important and long-overdue work will be essential reading for anyone concerned with the hidden complexities of African American life. Fortner illuminates the problems that the majority of working and middle class blacks face from criminal elements within their communities; the sometimes patronizing indifference of white and black liberals toward them, compounded by the manipulation of their concerns by conservatives; and the tragic, unintended consequences of a flawed drug and penal policy they were driven, out of despair and fury, to support. This is a major contribution to our understanding of the interaction of class, race, and public policy in America.--Orlando Patterson, Harvard University


A fresh, bold, powerful book that shakes up a pressing contemporary debate. Fortner insists on listening to the black voices that supported the rise of our terrible incarceration policies. Through careful research, he describes a deeply conflicted community confronting crime, groping for respectability, challenging the white gaze, and reaching for social justice. Black Silent Majority is forcefully argued, beautifully written, and profoundly moving.--James A. Morone, author of Hellfire Nation and The Devils We Know


Author Information

Michael Javen Fortner is Assistant Professor and Academic Director of Urban Studies at the CUNY School of Professional Studies, Murphy Institute.

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