The pervasive corporate media bubble, which
grossly distorts the views most Americans have of the world beyond
their shores, and of life in America’s black one-eighth, operates to
fool African Americans, too. While a fortunate few of us are doing
very well indeed, and many more are hanging on as best we can, the
conditions of life for a substantial chunk of black America are not
substantially improving, and appear to be getting much worse. This
is a truth which can’t be found anywhere in the corporate media, but
it is nevertheless one with which we must familiarize ourselves in
preparation for the upcoming national black dialogue. It is high time
to begin constructing useful indices with which to measure the quality
of life, not just for a fortunate few, but for the broad masses of
our people in America’s black one-eighth.
Measuring the quality of life in black America
Painting an accurate picture is not difficult. Useful measures of
family income and cohesiveness, of home ownership, life expectancy,
education levels, of unemployment and underemployment abound. But
among all the relevant data on the state of black America today one
factor stands out: the growth of America’s public policy of racially
selective policing, prosecution, and mass imprisonment of its black
citizens over the past 30 years. The operation of the crime
control industry has left a distinctive, multidimensional and devastating
mark on the lives of millions of black families and on the economic
and social fabric of the communities in which they live.
About half the nation’s 2.2 million prisoners are black. With only
36 million of us, that’s an astounding 3% of African Americans, counting
all ages and both sexes, languishing behind bars, with a roughly equal
number on probation, parole, house arrest or other court supervision.
Almost one in three 18-year-old black males across the board is likely
to catch a felony conviction, and in some communities nearly half the
black male workforce under 40 have criminal records. A felony conviction
in America is a stunningly accurate predictor of a life of insecure
employment at poverty-level wages and no health care, of fragile family
ties, of low educational attainment and limited or no civic participation,
and a strong likelihood of re-imprisonment. Each month, tens of thousands
of jobless, skill-less, stigmatized and often anti-socialized ex-prisoners
are released back into communities that lack job and educational opportunities,
where intact families are more the exception than the rule, and where
upward social mobility is a myth.
Clearly, more than any other single public policy, the day to day
operation of America’s crime control industry magnifies and exacerbates
racial inequality, deepens black poverty, and wreaks widespread destabilization
on black families and communities. Among the many scholars and researchers
who have persuasively argued and extensively documented these conditions
is Dr. Paul Street of the Chicago Urban League in “The
Vicious Circle: Race, Prison, Jobs and Community in Chicago,
Illinois and the Nation.”
So if you want to know where black families fare the worst, where
the lowest wages and life expectancy are, where to find the highest
unemployment and the greatest number of single parent households among
African Americans, you don’t need an online survey. You certainly
don’t count the black businesses or the black elected officials. You
count the black prisoners, and the former prisoners, and the ruined
communities they come from and are discharged into. That’s what BC did, and here are the results.
The Ten Worst States in the US to be Black
Wisconsin leads the nation in the percentage of its black inhabitants
under lock and key. Just over four percent of black Wisconsin, including
the very old and the very young of both sexes, are behind bars. Most
of the state’s African Americans reside in the Milwaukee area, and
most of its black prisoners are drawn from just a handful of poor and
economically deprived black communities where jobs, intact families
and educational opportunities are the most scarce, and paroled back
into those same neighborhoods. So Wisconsin, and in particular the
Milwaukee area justly merit the invidious distinction of the Worst
Place in the Nation to be Black.
Iowa, with only a small black population, is not far behind. The
crime control industries in Wisconsin and Iowa seem to have learned
to make the most efficient use of the preferred human material available
to them, locking up the few black inhabitants of those states at a
rate 11.6 times higher than whites.
Texas, the nation’s second largest state, is the third worst place
to be black in America, and is in a class by itself, first because
its extraordinary rate of black incarceration affects such a large
population. Only New York has more African Americans than Texas, and
only the two relatively small states previously mentioned lock up a
higher percentage of their black citizens. Though California has 50
percent more people, Texas has a slightly larger prison population
and only a 5 to 1 ratio between its black and white rates of imprisonment. We
may safely assume that since very few of its wealthy Texans are behind
bars, Texas is just a very bad place to be poor, whether you’re black
or not.
A total of 900,000 African Americans live in Oklahoma, Arizona, Delaware,
Nevada, Oregon and Colorado, and another 2 million-plus in California,
where the proportion of prisoners among total African Americans hovers
just under 3 percent.
How Much Better is Better? How Much Worse is Worst?
The answer in both cases is, unfortunately: not much. Only one hundredth
of a percentage point separates Iowa’s 3.30% rate of black incarceration
from that of Texas, with 3.29%. Twenty-seven more states manage to
lock up between 2 and 3% of their African American inhabitants, and
only Maine, Hawaii and North Dakota fail to incarcerate more than 1.55%
of blacks. For whites, the national average ratio of prisoners to
the general population is less than 4 tenths of one percent.
The damning truth laid bare once again by this fact, is that America’s
policy of racially selective policing, prosecuting and imprisonment
of its black one-eighth is a truly consistent and national one, even
though it is implemented with arbitrary severity by countless state
and local authorities.
Dishonorable Mentions
This distinction goes to New
Jersey, Connecticut, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, and New York.
BC’s Dishonorable Mention is reserved for those states
not already enumerated which have the highest disparity between black
and white
incarceration rates. Wisconsin and Iowa belong here too, with disparity
rates between 11 and 12 to one, but they have already been mentioned. This
dismal category is especially significant because black populations
in three of the states with extraordinary disparity rates fall largely
within the New York City Metropolitan Statistical area, the largest
concentration of black people in North America. Suffice it to say
that for practical purposes, New York City and its environs are not
that much better a place to be black than Texas.
STATE...........BLACK-WHITE
DISPARITY
New Jersey............13.15
to one
Connecticut...........12.77
to one
Minnesota.............12.63
to one
Pennsylvania..........10.53
to one
New York.............. 9.47
to one
The second largest concentration of African Americans in New Jersey
lies within the Philadelphia Metropolitan Statistical Area. Note Pennsylvania’s
fourth place ranking on the Dishonorable list.
The “enlightened” state of Minnesota has two more peculiar distinctions. First,
it commits one of the nation’s largest percentages of offenders to
community corrections, the generic name for “non-prison” sentencing
alternatives. With one of the nation’s highest rates of disparity
between its black and white inhabitants, it appears that Minnesota’s
white offenders are disproportionately funneled into alternative sentencing
situations, but we have no data to support such a conclusion. Secondly,
according to the Justice Department’s Bureau of Justice Statistics,
which together with the US Census Department is the source for all
numerical data in this article, Minnesota had the fastest growing prison
population in the country as of mid-year 2004, the latest date for
which stats are publicly available.
What About the South?
Alert readers may have noticed that except for Delaware and Texas,
not a single southern state made BC’s Ten Worst or
its Dishonorable Mention, even though Louisiana is well known to have
the nation’ highest
per capita rate of incarceration for its whole population. How is
this possible?
The answer is that our ranking is based solely on the percentage of
a state’s black population behind state and local prison walls. The
following table sorts the top 13 states in order of their relative
black populations, from Mississippi with 36% to Illinois with 15%.
This statistical approach catches all the states of the old South except
Texas and Florida, and reveals an interesting pattern.
All eleven southern states in this
table lock up noticeably higher per capita numbers of their whole
populations, black, white and otherwise, than do New York and Illinois. But
southern rates of disparity between black and white imprisonment
do not approach those of Illinois at 7.5 to one or New York’s 9.5
to one. Like Texas, nine of these eleven Southern states achieve
their overall high imprisonment rates by confining white people to
prison twice as often as New York and Illinois. Furthermore, the
five states with the highest black percentage of their total populations
have rates of black imprisonment closer to those of Illinois and
New York than to Texas. Like Texas, the Old South is just
not a good place to be poor, whether one is black or white.
Federal Prisoners: Another Texas and then some
Finally, discerning readers have probably noticed that near the beginning
of this article the proportion of all African Americans in the nation’s
prisons and jails was given as about 3%, but the numbers quoted for
only three states reached or exceeded that figure. How did we get
three percent?
The missing incarcerated, who did not figure in BC’s
calculations for the Dishonorable Mentions and Ten Worst list because BC was
unable to sort out their states of origin, race or region, are those
in federal
prisons and jails. The federal gulag held about 170,000 people as
of mid-year 2004, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, slightly
more than the Texas prison system, and growing much faster. We have
not yet obtained racial breakdown data for federal prisons, but if
and when it becomes available it may show racial disparities as severe
as those in Illinois, which would suffice to make almost half of federal
inmates African American.
Better Lives, Better Families, Better Communities
The
work of reclaiming lives, families and communities shredded by America’s incarceration binge must take place in hundreds of cities
and towns and in several arenas. Thousands of churches and local organizations
are trying with scant resources to provide re-entry services to former
prisoners. While their efforts deserve praise and support, BC believes
that problems created by bad public policies demand solutions that
include changing those destructive policies. In fact, it is misleading
and foolish to portray the problem of racially selective mass imprisonment
as one addressable by a million individual solutions, by several
hundred thousand family solutions, or by ten thousand black church
and small
business solutions.
The problem is that public policy
in America only moves in the direction of addressing human needs
when under the insistent pressure of mass
movements. Where will the mass movement come from to change
America’s
racially selective policy of mass incarceration? What will be its
first tasks, and what will it look like? These are among the key questions
before black activists between now and the time we “Go
back to Gary.” |