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Masked Racism: Reflections on the
Prison Industrial Complex
by Angela Y. Davis
Imprisonment has become the response of first
resort to far too many of the social problems
that burden people who are ensconced in poverty.
These problems often are veiled by being conveniently
grouped together under the category “crime”
and by the automatic attribution of criminal
behavior to people of color. Homelessness,
unemployment, drug addiction, mental illness,
and illiteracy are only a few of the problems
that disappear from public view when the human
beings contending with them are relegated
to cages.
Prisons thus perform a feat of magic. Or
rather the people who continually vote in
new prison bonds and tacitly assent to a proliferating
network of prisons and jails have been tricked
into believing in the magic of imprisonment.
But prisons do not disappear problems, they
disappear human beings. And the practice of
disappearing vast numbers of people from poor,
immigrant, and racially marginalized communities
has literally become big business.
5 times as many black men are presently
in prison as in four-year colleges and universities.
The seeming effortlessness of magic always
conceals an enormous amount of behind-the-scenes
work. When prisons disappear human beings
in order to convey the illusion of solving
social problems, penal infrastructures must
be created to accommodate a rapidly swelling
population of caged people. Goods and services
must be provided to keep imprisoned populations
alive. Sometimes these populations must be
kept busy and at other times -- particularly
in repressive super-maximum prisons and in
INS detention centers -- they must be deprived
of virtually all meaningful activity. Vast
numbers of handcuffed and shackled people
are moved across state borders as they are
transferred from one state or federal prison
to another.
All this work, which used to be the primary
province of government, is now also performed
by private corporations, whose links to government
in the field of what is euphemistically called
“corrections” resonate dangerously
with the military industrial complex. The
dividends that accrue from investment in the
punishment industry, like those that accrue
from investment in weapons production, only
amount to social destruction. Taking into
account the structural similarities and profitability
of business-government linkages in the realms
of military production and public punishment,
the expanding penal system can now be characterized
as a “prison industrial complex.”
The Color of Imprisonment
Almost two million people are currently
locked up in the immense network of U.S. prisons
and jails. More than 70 percent of the imprisoned
population are people of color. It is rarely
acknowledged that the fastest growing group
of prisoners are black women and that Native
American prisoners are the largest group per
capita. Approximately five million people
-- including those on probation and parole
-- are directly under the surveillance of
the criminal justice system.
Three decades ago, the imprisoned population
was approximately one-eighth its current size.
While women still constitute a relatively
small percentage of people behind bars, today
the number of incarcerated women in California
alone is almost twice what the nationwide
women’s prison population was in 1970.
According to Elliott Currie, “[t]he
prison has become a looming presence in our
society to an extent unparalleled in our history
-- or that of any other industrial democracy.
Short of major wars, mass incarceration has
been the most thoroughly implemented government
social program of our time.”
The practice of disappearing people has become
big business.
To deliver up bodies destined for profitable
punishment, the political economy of prisons
relies on racialized assumptions of criminality
-- such as images of black welfare mothers
reproducing criminal children -- and on racist
practices in arrest, conviction, and sentencing
patterns. Colored bodies constitute the main
human raw material in this vast experiment
to disappear the major social problems of
our time. Once the aura of magic is stripped
away from the imprisonment solution, what
is revealed is racism, class bias, and the
parasitic seduction of capitalist profit.
The prison industrial system materially and
morally impoverishes its inhabitants and devours
the social wealth needed to address the very
problems that have led to spiraling numbers
of prisoners.
As prisons take up more and more space on
the social landscape, other government programs
that have previously sought to respond to
social needs -- such as Temporary Assistance
to Needy Families -- are being squeezed out
of existence. The deterioration of public
education, including prioritizing discipline
and security over learning in public schools
located in poor communities, is directly related
to the prison “solution.”
Profiting from Prisoners
As prisons proliferate in U.S. society,
private capital has become enmeshed in the
punishment industry. And precisely because
of their profit potential, prisons are becoming
increasingly important to the U.S. economy.
If the notion of punishment as a source of
potentially stupendous profits is disturbing
by itself, then the strategic dependence on
racist structures and ideologies to render
mass punishment palatable and profitable is
even more troubling.
Prison privatization is the most obvious
instance of capital’s current movement
toward the prison industry. While government-run
prisons are often in gross violation of international
human rights standards, private prisons are
even less accountable. In March of this year,
the Corrections Corporation of America (CCA),
the largest U.S. private prison company, claimed
54,944 beds in 68 facilities under contract
or development in the U.S., Puerto Rico, the
United Kingdom, and Australia. Following the
global trend of subjecting more women to public
punishment, CCA recently opened a women’s
prison outside Melbourne. The company recently
identified California as its “new frontier.”
Wackenhut Corrections Corporation (WCC),
the second largest U.S. prison company, claimed
contracts and awards to manage 46 facilities
in North America, U.K., and Australia. It
boasts a total of 30,424 beds as well as contracts
for prisoner health care services, transportation,
and security.
Short of major wars, mass incarceration
has been the most thoroughly implemented government
social program of our time.
Currently, the stocks of both CCA and WCC
are doing extremely well. Between 1996 and
1997, CCA’s revenues increased by 58
percent, from $293 million to $462 million.
Its net profit grew from $30.9 million to
$53.9 million. WCC raised its revenues from
$138 million in 1996 to $210 million in 1997.
Unlike public correctional facilities, the
vast profits of these private facilities rely
on the employment of non-union labor.
The Prison Industrial Complex
But private prison companies are only the
most visible component of the increasing corporatization
of punishment. Government contracts to build
prisons have bolstered the construction industry.
The architectural community has identified
prison design as a major new niche. Technology
developed for the military by companies like
Westinghouse is being marketed for use in
law enforcement and punishment.
Moreover, corporations that appear to be far
removed from the business of punishment are
intimately involved in the expansion of the
prison industrial complex. Prison construction
bonds are one of the many sources of profitable
investment for leading financiers such as
Merrill Lynch. MCI charges prisoners and their
families outrageous prices for the precious
telephone calls which are often the only contact
prisoners have with the free world.
Many corporations whose products we consume
on a daily basis have learned that prison
labor power can be as profitable as third
world labor power exploited by U.S.-based
global corporations. Both relegate formerly
unionized workers to joblessness and many
even wind up in prison. Some of the companies
that use prison labor are IBM, Motorola, Compaq,
Texas Instruments, Honeywell, Microsoft, and
Boeing. But it is not only the hi-tech industries
that reap the profits of prison labor. Nordstrom
department stores sell jeans that are marketed
as “Prison Blues,” as well as
t-shirts and jackets made in Oregon prisons.
The advertising slogan for these clothes is
“made on the inside to be worn on the
outside.” Maryland prisoners inspect
glass bottles and jars used by Revlon and
Pierre Cardin, and schools throughout the
world buy graduation caps and gowns made by
South Carolina prisoners.
“For private business,” write
Eve Goldberg and Linda Evans (a political
prisoner inside the Federal Correctional Institution
at Dublin, California) “prison labor
is like a pot of gold. No strikes. No union
organizing. No health benefits, unemployment
insurance, or workers’ compensation
to pay. No language barriers, as in foreign
countries. New leviathan prisons are being
built on thousands of eerie acres of factories
inside the walls. Prisoners do data entry
for Chevron, make telephone reservations for
TWA, raise hogs, shovel manure, make circuit
boards, limousines, waterbeds, and lingerie
for Victoria’s Secret -- all at a fraction
of the cost of ‘free labor.’”
Devouring the Social Wealth
Although prison labor -- which ultimately
is compensated at a rate far below the minimum
wage -- is hugely profitable for the private
companies that use it, the penal system as
a whole does not produce wealth. It devours
the social wealth that could be used to subsidize
housing for the homeless, to ameliorate public
education for poor and racially marginalized
communities, to open free drug rehabilitation
programs for people who wish to kick their
habits, to create a national health care system,
to expand programs to combat HIV, to eradicate
domestic abuse -- and, in the process, to
create well-paying jobs for the unemployed.
Since 1984 more than twenty new prisons
have opened in California, while only one
new campus was added to the California State
University system and none to the University
of California system. In 1996-97, higher education
received only 8.7 percent of the State’s
General Fund while corrections received 9.6
percent. Now that affirmative action has been
declared illegal in California, it is obvious
that education is increasingly reserved for
certain people, while prisons are reserved
for others. Five times as many black men are
presently in prison as in four-year colleges
and universities. This new segregation has
dangerous implications for the entire country.
By segregating people labeled as criminals,
prison simultaneously fortifies and conceals
the structural racism of the U.S. economy.
Claims of low unemployment rates -- even in
black communities -- make sense only if one
assumes that the vast numbers of people in
prison have really disappeared and thus have
no legitimate claims to jobs. The numbers
of black and Latino men currently incarcerated
amount to two percent of the male labor force.
According to criminologist David Downes, “[t]reating
incarceration as a type of hidden unemployment
may raise the jobless rate for men by about
one-third, to 8 percent. The effect on the
black labor force is greater still, raising
the [black] male unemployment rate from 11
percent to 19 percent.”
Hidden Agenda
Mass incarceration is not a solution to
unemployment, nor is it a solution to the
vast array of social problems that are hidden
away in a rapidly growing network of prisons
and jails. However, the great majority of
people have been tricked into believing in
the efficacy of imprisonment, even though
the historical record clearly demonstrates
that prisons do not work. Racism has undermined
our ability to create a popular critical discourse
to contest the ideological trickery that posits
imprisonment as key to public safety. The
focus of state policy is rapidly shifting
from social welfare to social control.
Black, Latino, Native American, and many Asian
youth are portrayed as the purveyors of violence,
traffickers of drugs, and as envious of commodities
that they have no right to possess. Young
black and Latina women are represented as
sexually promiscuous and as indiscriminately
propagating babies and poverty. Criminality
and deviance are racialized. Surveillance
is thus focused on communities of color, immigrants,
the unemployed, the undereducated, the homeless,
and in general on those who have a diminishing
claim to social resources. Their claim to
social resources continues to diminish in
large part because law enforcement and penal
measures increasingly devour these resources.
The prison industrial complex has thus created
a vicious cycle of punishment which only further
impoverishes those whose impoverishment is
supposedly “solved” by imprisonment.
Therefore, as the emphasis of government
policy shifts from social welfare to crime
control, racism sinks more deeply into the
economic and ideological structures of U.S.
society. Meanwhile, conservative crusaders
against affirmative action and bilingual education
proclaim the end of racism, while their opponents
suggest that racism’s remnants can be
dispelled through dialogue and conversation.
But conversations about “race relations”
will hardly dismantle a prison industrial
complex that thrives on and nourishes the
racism hidden within the deep structures of
our society.
The emergence of a U.S. prison industrial
complex within a context of cascading conservatism
marks a new historical moment, whose dangers
are unprecedented. But so are its opportunities.
Considering the impressive number of grassroots
projects that continue to resist the expansion
of the punishment industry, it ought to be
possible to bring these efforts together to
create radical and nationally visible movements
that can legitimize anti-capitalist critiques
of the prison industrial complex. It ought
to be possible to build movements in defense
of prisoners’ human rights and movements
that persuasively argue that what we need
is not new prisons, but new health care, housing,
education, drug programs, jobs, and education.
To safeguard a democratic future, it is possible
and necessary to weave together the many and
increasing strands of resistance to the prison
industrial complex into a powerful movement
for social transformation.
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