Reform Nation
The First Step Act and the Movement to End Mass Incarceration
- 282 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About This Book
How one law tells the story of America's modern criminal justice movement
In late 2018, the First Step Act was signed into law by President Donald Trump just hours before a government shutdown. It was one of few major pieces of federal criminal justice reform since the 1970s to move toward reversing the incarceration frenzy that had characterized United States policy. While it did not amount to revolutionary reform, in Reform Nation, Colleen P. Eren investigates it as a symbol for the larger movement's trajectory. Its unlikely passage during a period of political polarization was testament to the power of a new constellation of advocates, stakeholders, and strange bedfellow alliances.
These intriguing and complex dynamics are indicative of a longer, twenty-year shift in which the movement became nationalized and mainstreamed. Using in-depth interviews with major players in the national movement, formerly incarcerated activists, celebrities, and donors, this is the first book to turn the mirror back on the criminal justice reform movement itselfâthe frames used, the voices heard, the capital activated among elite participants, and the bitter controversies. This snapshot in time raises much larger questions about how our democratic processes inform criminal justice policy, and where we are going in the decades to come.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Dedication
- CONTENTS
- Preface
- Glossary of Terms and Acronyms
- 1. The First Step Act Puzzle
- 2. Mainstreamization and the Movement
- 3. Billionaires, Philanthropy, and Reform
- 4. Celebrity Activism in Reform
- 5. ReformÂŽ: Corporate Social Activism
- 6. Strange Bedfellows
- 7. Formerly Incarcerated Activists and the Future of Criminal Justice Reform
- Acknowledgments
- Interviewees, Titles, and Affiliations
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index