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Federal criminal justice legislation and the post-World War II social structure of accumulation in the United States
Authors:David E. Barlow  Melissa Hickman Barlow
Affiliation:(1) Department of Criminal Justice, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, USA;(2) Department of Social Change and Development, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay, USA
Abstract:This article explores the relationship between the political economy and the criminal justice system through an analysis of the impact of long economic cycles in the social structure of accumulation on U.S. federal criminal justice legislation from 1948 to 1987. An analysis is conducted which compares both qualitative and quantitative changes in these legislative acts from the period of economic expansion (1948 to 1967) to the period of contraction (1968 to 1987). The research findings of this investigation indicate that mechanisms of social control intensify during periods of prolonged economic contraction; however, the concept of an ldquoexceptional staterdquo, with a proportional increase in more coercive crime control strategies, is somewhat challenged.Earlier versions of this paper were presented at meetings of the American Society of Criminology (1988, 1989, 1990).
Keywords:
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