Eliminating the enemy
- 1 October 2004
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Punishment & Society
- Vol. 6 (4) , 357-378
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1462474504046118
Abstract
This article investigates why Congress passed legislation in 1994 that denied Pell Grants - the primary source of funding for postsecondary correctional education (PSCE) - to prisoners, despite evidence that PSCE helped reduce recidivism and bolster carceral order. Analysis of the congressional debates and relevant media texts shows that lawmakers, in concert with the popular media, produced a legislative penal drama in which they spoke to key audiences’ - particularly white, working and middle class voters’ - mistrust of penal practitioners and criminal justice experts, prejudices toward (black and brown) street criminals, fears about crime and anxiety over the economy, the transformed labor market and access to higher education. The article contends that the timing and texture of the Pell Grant affair were symbiotically related to a confluence of developments in the political and related fields during the 1980s and early 1990s. It extends Emile Durkheim’s communicative theory of penality to encompass notions of class power and political interest. By producing such legislative penal dramas, lawmakers simultaneously tap into and legitimize collective sentiments of particular audiences, highlight symbolic boundaries between in-and out-groups and shore up political electoral support for punitive policies.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- The War on Crime as Hegemonic Strategy: A Neo-Marxian Theory of the New Punitiveness in U.S. Criminal Justice PolicyPublished by SAGE Publications ,2012
- Deadly SymbiosisPunishment & Society, 2001
- The Culture of ControlPublished by University of Chicago Press ,2001
- Unthought ThoughtsPunishment & Society, 2001
- The Time BindWorkingUSA, 1997
- Penal ‘Austerity’: The Doctrine of Less Eligibility Reborn?Published by Springer Nature ,1996
- THE NEW PENOLOGY: NOTES ON THE EMERGING STRATEGY OF CORRECTIONS AND ITS IMPLICATIONS*Criminology, 1992
- Punishment and Modern SocietyPublished by University of Chicago Press ,1990
- CORRECTIONAL POST?SECONDARY EDUCATION: THE EXPANDING ROLE OF COMMUNITY COLLEGESCommunity Junior College Research Quarterly of Research and Practice, 1985
- The Division of Labour in SocietyPublished by Springer Nature ,1984