New Study Explores the Impact on Poor Black Women of the High Incarceration Rate of Men

Beth Richie, a professor of African American studies and gender and women’s studies at the University of Illinois at Chicago has written a new book focusing on the impact on women in poverty neighborhoods of high incarceration rates among Black men. The book, Arrested Justice: Black Women, Violence, and America’s Prison Nation (New York University Press, 2012), states that harsh sentencing for Black men, combines with gender dynamics in Black neighborhoods to propel some women into violent relationships and crime.

“While the impact on men is clear,” Dr. Richie states, “there are also significant ways that women experience the negative effects of the prison nation, especially those women who also experience gender violence. There is a new level of disdain toward Black women who are young, poor, queer, or living in vulnerable circumstances. The more stigmatized their social position, the easier it is to victimize them.

Professor Richie concludes, “When America’s prison nation is understood to be the backdrop for male violence against Black women, a new formulation of anti-violence politics will emerge.”

Dr. Richie is a graduate of Cornell University. She holds a master of social work degree from Washington University in St. Louis and a Ph.D. in sociology from the City University of New York.

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