Introduction
As Ruth Wilson Gilmore points out in Golden Gulag, prisons have become “catchall solutions to social problems.”[footnoteRef:2] Those problems can be rooted in drug issues stemming from the abuse of opioids that have proliferated on the black market thanks to the pharmaceutical industry’s expertise in developing highly addictive substances that filtered through physicians on to patients and then on to the streets. They can be rooted in familial situations where socioeconomic factors, education, and cultural variables impact the stability of families, bringing tension, stress and strife to an environment that should otherwise be calm, stable and welcoming. They can be rooted in society’s cultural history, and the racist and classist problems that have long been encountered therein. The prison industrial complex arose out of the whirlwind of these seeds being scattered across the earth of the U.S. It came about in response to the “moral panics” surrounding issues of race, gender, sexuality, crime, and law and order. While alternatives to mass criminalization are possible when conceived from the perspective of social movements, in the U.S. incarceration has become an industry that has also become a politicized issue. This paper will describe and analyze how policing and prisons have become what Ruth Wilson Gilmore calls “geographical solutions” to social and economic crises over the past four decades. [2: Ruth Wilson Gilmore, Golden Gulag (Berkeley, University of California Press, 2007), 5.]
A Geographical Solution?
What is imprisonment? It is the transference of an individual from a place of freedom to a place of confinement, away from free persons. It is, as Gilmore describes, “a geographical solution that purports to solve social problems by extensively and repeatedly removing people from disordered, deindustrialized milieus and depositing them somewhere else.”[footnoteRef:3] Yet, she notes, in all honesty it cannot be said to be a system that results in lower crime communities—for she shows that those communities that do not have prisons are the ones with the least crime.[footnoteRef:4] What this suggests is that communities that focus on incarceration as the solution to community problems actually never end up solving or adequately addressing those community problems because they instead just try to treat the symptoms by removing the products of those problems to another location—i.e., to prison. The problems persist because they have not been addressed: crime is just symptom of the socioeconomic issues that underlie the criminality. [3: Ruth Wilson Gilmore, Golden Gulag, 14.] [4: Ruth Wilson Gilmore, Golden Gulag, 15. ]
From the policing perspective, the theory of Broken Windows has long served as a rationale for making more stops and more arrests of citizens in communities where negligence, vandalism, theft, graffiti, litter, abandoned buildings and broken windows serve as invitations to the criminal class that here is a neighborhood that does not care about itself, that does not care whether the criminal elements come to it to live and fester. But not every accepts that theory. Rachel Herzing is one who rejects it, stating that it is in fact “not much of a theory at all….it has become an incantation, a spell used by law enforcement, advocates, and social scientists alike to do everything from designing social service programs to training cops.”[footnoteRef:5] This idea of Broken Windows theory being used as a spell to wave away...
Bibliography
Gilmore, Ruth Wilson and Craig Gilmore. “Beyond Bratton,” in Policing the Planet.
Gilmore, Ruth Wilson. Golden Gulag. Berkeley, University of California Press, 2007.
Herzing, Rachel. “The Margical Life of Broken Windows,” in Policing the Planet.
Sudbury, Julia. “A World Without Prisons: Resisting Militarism, Globalized Punishment, and Empire,” Social Justice 31.2 (2004): 9-28.
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