James Campbell provides an in-depth survey of crime, punishment and justice in African American history. Presenting cutting-edge scholarship on issues of criminal justice in African American history in an accessible way for students, he makes connections between black experiences of criminal justice and violence from the slave era to the present.
JAMES CAMPBELL is Lecturer in American History at the University of Leicester. He is the author of Slavery on Trial: Race, Class, and Criminal Justice in Antebellum Richmond, Virginia and the co-editor (with Rebecca Griffin) of Reconstruction: People and Perspectives.
Innehållsförteckning
IntroductionPART I: SLAVERY TO FREEDOMSlave Resistance, Crime and ControlSlavery and Criminal Justice Before the Civil WarReconstructionPART II: JIM CROW JUSTICEThe State and the Mob: Lynching, Criminal Justice and the Death PenaltyPunishment and Labour: Convict Leasing, Chain Gangs and PeonageResisting Jim Crow JusticePART III: FROM THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT TO THE PRESENTCriminal Justice and the Black Freedom Struggle, 1954-1972The Modern Penal StateEpilogue: Politics, Memory and Justice in Modern AmericaFurther Reading.