Pubdate: Sat, 19 Apr 2003 Source: Tallahassee Democrat (FL) Contact: 2003 Tallahassee Democrat. Website: http://www.tallahassee.com/mld/democrat/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/444 Author: Cynthia Tucker Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/racial.htm (Racial Issues) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) Note: The author is editorial page editor for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. RACIAL DISPARITY OF INCARCERATION HURTS BLACK FAMILIES With little protest from its crime-weary citizens, the United States has become the prison camp of the western world, locking up 2 million of its population. Young black men are a disproportionate number of the inmates. Among men between 20 and 34, 1.4 percent of white men and 4 percent of Hispanic men are behind bars. But 12 percent of black men in that same age group are incarcerated, according to the Justice Department. That is a stunning statistic. No community can survive the effective loss of so many of its young men. And the 12 percent figure manages to minimize the crisis, since it is a snapshot of the prison population over any given day. According to Allen Beck, chief demographer for the Bureau of Justice Statistics, nearly 30 percent of black men will be incarcerated during their lives. Yet you hear little outcry from civil rights advocates. Al Sharpton has campaigned against slavery in Sudan. Jesse Jackson battles gender segregation at Augusta National. Georgia civil rights activist Tyrone Brooks protests the possible return of the Confederate battle flag to Georgia's Capitol. But the high rate of incarceration - which is decimating the black working class - is not the central focus of civil rights advocates. How could that be? It is the single most daunting challenge to black America today because it creates the conditions that lead to other failures. Already, nearly 70 percent of black children are born outside the bonds of marriage - leaving those children more vulnerable to educational failure, drug abuse and early parenthood themselves. A community is in trouble when children born to two-parent families represent a minority. But with so many men of marriageable age behind bars, there is little hope for rebuilding the black family structure. Even when released from prison, those men will make poor prospects for marriage. With criminal histories, they will not easily find good jobs. Moreover, hard time in prison often turns a bad criminal into a worse one - a man who will be disinclined to rejoin society on any but the most destructive terms. Clearly, there are among black prisoners many violent felons who deserve their sentences. They are men who rob, murder, rape and maim, making war zones of their neighborhoods. The presence of violent predators not only endangers the lives of law-abiding citizens, but also ruins economic prospects. Down-at-the-heels neighborhoods have a chance at rebirth only when their streets are safe. But America's criminal justice system does a poor job of separating the hardened criminal from the minor offender with a shot at rehabilitation - especially if the offenders are black. Research shows that black men are more likely to be imprisoned for minor offenses, while white men are more likely to be given probation for the same crimes. This impulse to imprison black men now stretches to include the man-child. Frightened by a few highly publicized juvenile crimes, politicians began imposing harsher sanctions on juvenile offenders in the early 1990s. Predictably, the lash has fallen more frequently on black and brown boys than white. Among young people who have never been to a juvenile prison, blacks are more than six times as likely as whites to be sentenced by juvenile courts to prison time, according to a 2000 report, "And Justice for Some," issued by the Justice Department and several foundations. For those charged with drug offenses, black youths are 48 times more likely than whites to be sentenced to juvenile prisons, the report said. It is now possible to visit black neighborhoods where most of the young men have disappeared, where families spend their Sundays visiting their incarcerated loved ones, where boys believe going to prison is a rite of manhood. Those neighborhoods cannot hope to offer their residents a route into the American mainstream. The epidemic of incarceration ought to be the full-time preoccupation of every civil rights group - indeed, every human rights group - in the country. It represents a grave threat to the future of not only black America but all of America. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk