The First Civil Right:
by Naomi Murakawa
The explosive rise in the U.S. incarceration rate in
the second half of the twentieth century, and the racial transformation of the
prison population from mostly white at mid-century to sixty-five percent black
and Latino in the present day, is a trend that cannot easily be ignored. Many
believe that this shift began with the "tough on crime" policies
advocated by Republicans and southern Democrats beginning in the late 1960s,
which sought longer prison sentences, more frequent use of the death penalty,
and the explicit or implicit targeting of politically marginalized people. In
The First Civil Right, Naomi Murakawa inverts the conventional wisdom by
arguing that the expansion of the federal carceral state-a system that
disproportionately imprisons blacks and Latinos-was, in fact, rooted in the
civil-rights liberalism of the 1940s and early 1960s, not in the period after.
Murakawa traces the development of the modern American
prison system through several presidencies, both Republication and Democrat.
Responding to calls to end the lawlessness and violence against blacks at the
state and local levels, the Truman administration expanded the scope of what
was previously a weak federal system. Later administrations from Johnson to
Clinton expanded the federal presence even more. Ironically, these steps laid
the groundwork for the creation of the vast penal archipelago that now exists
in the United States. What began as a liberal initiative to curb the mob
violence and police brutality that had deprived racial minorities of their
'first civil right-physical safety-eventually evolved into the federal
correctional system that now deprives them, in unjustly large numbers, of
another important right: freedom. The First Civil Right is a groundbreaking
analysis of root of the conflicts that lie at the intersection of race and the
legal system in America