"An excellent guide that provides various tools and methods for thinking about how crime is perceived,
defined and punished in American society."
--Southland Prison News
"[D]elineates how shaky the FBI's Uniform Crime Reports can be, especially for year-to-year comparisons."
--Orange County Register
"In a sweeping indictment of over forty years of crime policy, Chambliss marshals evidence to show that America's
war on crime has been a costly failure with terrible side effects. The work documents how, starting with Barry
Goldwater's campaign, conservative politicians consciously sought to link crime problems to the civil rights movement.
By the 1990s, this cynical and racist campaign has been so successful that even Democrats have enthusiastically
embraced justice policies that have replaced a third of young African American males under correctional supervision.
The war on drugs is a special target of Chambliss' analysis: not only has this war been a spectacular failure,
it has spawned corruption while creating a correctional industrial complex. Casualties of the war on drugs are
easy to find, Chambliss documents, with higher education leading the list. The most dramatic result, however, is
that America now shares with the newly created state of Russia, the world's highest incarceration rate."
--Meda Chesney-Lind, University of Hawaii at Manoa
"Chambliss's lucid, incisive, and highly informative study leaves the reader with little doubt that crime
is a very serious problem in the United States, though not in the manner that the population has been induced to
believe by intensive and politically-motivated indoctrination that has had a dire effect on the society, helping
to forge a virtual war against the poor. One basic problem is the manipulated perception of crime, uncorrelated
with its actual course. A second is the vast category of harmful and dangerous crime that goes largely unpunished
because of the power and privilege of the perpetrators. This is a wake-up call that is badly needed, offering insight
and guidelines for people who care about their society, its serious flaws, and what it could become if citizens
were to take the real issues into their own hands."
--Noam Chomsky, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
"William Chambliss is upset, and based on the data he amasses, the rest of us ought to be. The crime industry
is every bit as wasteful and destructive of American values as the military industrial complex of a generation
ago. Together with increasingly pliant and self-interested politicians and media, they take us into the new millennium
strapped for cash and burdened by fear and prejudice."
--David Kairys, Temple University School of Law; editor, The Politics of Law, Third Edition
Perseus Books Group Web Site, September, 2000
Summary
In the United States today, we are on the verge of fulfilling a nightmare scenario. Parents are fearful of letting
their children play in their own yards and elderly people are afraid to leave their homes. The bogeyman in this
rampant panic about crime is the young black male, who, in the media and public image, is a "superpredator"
lurking on every street corner ready to attack any prey that is vulnerable. But is crime in America really as bad
as the public has been made to believe? Power, Politics, and Crime argues that the current panic over crime has
been manufactured by the media, law enforcement bureaucracies, and the private prison industry. It shows how the
definition of criminal behavior systematically singles out the inner-city African American. But urban minorities
aren't the only victims. Although crime rates have been declining for 25 years, vast amounts of money pour into
the criminal justice-industrial complex, diverting scarce resources from other social services such as education,
social welfare, and health care. While in recent years downsizing has affected almost every segment of the public
sector, the criminal justice bureaucracies have seen an unprecedented expansion.
Through ethnographic observations, analysis of census data, and historical research, William Chambliss describes
what is happening, why it has come about, and what can be done about it. He explores the genesis of crime as a
political issue, and the effect that crime policies have had on different segments of the population. The book
is more than a statement about the politics of crime and punishment-it's a powerful indictment of contemporary
law enforcement practices in the United States.