Class number:
3111
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Title: Race and Incarceration |
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Department: History |
Career: Undergraduate |
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Component: Seminar |
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Session: Regular |
Instructor's Permission Required: No |
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Grading Basis: Regular |
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Units: 1.00 |
Enrollment limited to 4 |
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Current enrollment: 4 |
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Available seats: 0 |
Start date: Wednesday, January 25, 2023 |
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End date: Friday, May 12, 2023 |
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Mode of Instruction: In Person |
Schedule: W: 1:30PM-4:10PM, SH - S204 |
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Instructor(s): Greenberg, Cheryl |
Prerequisite(s): This course is not open to first-year or sophomore students without instructor consent. |
Distribution Requirement: Meets Humanities Requirement |
Course Description:
#BlackLivesMatter has brought the intersection of race and the criminal justice system into public conversation, but race has been intertwined with imprisonment since American colonization. This course begins with the ways slavery and African Americans were policed by the state, and the history of American prisons. After the Civil War, freed Black men and women sought equal rights and opportunities. In response, the justice system shifted to accommodate new forms of racial suppression. The course then considers this process, including civil rights activists' experiences with prisons, the War on Drugs' racial agenda, and Michelle Alexander's The New Jim Crow, which argued that the "prison-industrial complex" is the newest form of racial control. The course ends with current practices of, and challenges to, the criminal justice system. This course meets the Archival method requirement. |