Carceral democracy: prisons, race, and the punitive turn in Wisconsin, 1940-1971
Toller-Clark, Ian Thomas
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Permalink
https://hdl.handle.net/2142/115582
Description
Title
Carceral democracy: prisons, race, and the punitive turn in Wisconsin, 1940-1971
Author(s)
Toller-Clark, Ian Thomas
Issue Date
2022-04-19
Director of Research (if dissertation) or Advisor (if thesis)
Barrett, Marsha E
Doctoral Committee Chair(s)
Barrett, Marsha E
Committee Member(s)
Hoganson, Kristin
Oberdeck, Kathryn J
McDuffie, Erik S
Lassiter, Matthew D
Department of Study
History
Discipline
History
Degree Granting Institution
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Degree Name
Ph.D.
Degree Level
Dissertation
Keyword(s)
Prisons
Prison Reform
Rehabilitation
Public Policy
Political History Since 1940
Wisconsin
Modern Conservatism
Law and Order Politics
Postwar Liberalism
Social and Racial Politics
Abstract
“Carceral Democracy: Prisons, Race, and the Realignment of Politics in Wisconsin, 1940-1971,” analyzes how the intertwined development of penal reform, anti-black racism, and metropolitan politics undermined democratic governance in the postwar United States. I argue that a political movement for prisoner rehabilitation laid the foundation for mass incarceration. This movement of policymakers, politicians, and white middle-class homeowners in Wisconsin was part of a nation-wide vanguard that championed prison expansion and individualized treatment as solutions for modernizing and humanizing the country’s criminal justice system. My work is one of the first to examine how liberals and moderates at the grassroots, inspired by postwar notions of meritocratic individualism, racial equality, and pro-growth development policies, helped build a crucial component of the carceral state: the state correctional system. The term carceral state refers to a set of political actors, policies, and institutions—prosecutors, border patrol officers, correction guards, sentencing guidelines, parole programs, jails, prisons, and immigration centers—that exert the punitive power of the state over citizens and non-citizens alike. “Carceral Democracy” challenges both popular and scholarly narratives that the carceral state emerged from a grassroots political movement led by conservative national political figures, such as Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan. My research, which draws on records from the Wisconsin Division of Corrections and the Department of Public Welfare, constituent letters, and local newspapers, reveals that moderates and liberals living in the suburbs of Milwaukee, Green Bay, and Madison, championed medium-security prisons as the ideal locations for rehabilitating prisoners. They argued that a system of correctional facilities rather than just two penitentiaries would allow officials to classify and separate prisoners, and then subsequently create individualized treatment programs. However, the concept of classification and individualized rehabilitation were based on racist, classist, and gendered notions about the incarcerated that reified economic and social inequality. In time, moderates and liberals found themselves working alongside conservative state legislators to advocate for new prisons that would house an ever-increasing number of incarcerated individuals and provide economic support for economically struggling rural communities. Ultimately, “Carceral Democracy” shows that postwar penal reform efforts resulted in prisons becoming necessary components of the welfare state and pro-growth economic development in an age of colorblindness.
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