Review
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“Explosive debut…alarming, provocative and convincing.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“Michelle Alexander’s brave and bold new book paints a haunting picture in which dreary felon garb, post-prison
joblessness, and loss of voting rights now do the stigmatizing work once done by colored-only water fountains and
legally segregated schools. With dazzling candor, Alexander argues that we all pay the cost of the new Jim Crow.“
—Lani Guinier, professor at Harvard Law School and author of Lift Every Voice: Turning a Civil Rights Setback into a New
Vision of Social Justice and The Miner's Canary: Enlisting Race, Resisting Power, Transforming Democracy
“For every century there is a crisis in our democracy, the response to which defines how future generations view those
who were alive at the time. In the 18th century it was the transatlantic slave trade, in the 19th century it was
slavery, in the 20th century it was Jim Crow. Today it is mass incarceration. Alexander's book offers a timely and
original framework for understanding mass incarceration, its roots to Jim Crow, our modern caste system, and what must
be done to eliminate it. This book is a call to action.”
—Benjamin Todd Jealous, President and CEO, NAACP
“With imprisonment now the principal instrument of our social policy directed toward poorly educated black men, Michelle
Alexander argues convincingly that the huge racial disparity of punishment in America is not the mere result of neutral
state action. She sees the rise of mass incarceration as opening up a new front in the historic struggle for racial
justice. And, she’s right. If you care about justice in America, you need to read this book!”
—Glenn C. Loury, economist at Brown University and author of The Anatomy of Racial Inequality and Race, Incarceration
and American Values
“After reading The New Jim Crow, Michelle Alexander's stunning work of scholarship, one gains the terrible realization
that, for people of color, the American criminal justice system resembles the Soviet Union's gulag---the latter punished
ideas, the former punishes a condition.”
—David Levering Lewis, Pulitzer-prize winning historian at NYU and author of W.E.B. Du Bois: The Fight for Equality and
the American Century, 1919-1963
"We need to pay attention to Michelle Alexander's contention that mass imprisonment in the U.S. constitutes a racial
caste system. Her analysis reflects the passion of an advocate and the intellect of a scholar."
—Marc Mauer, Executive Director, The Sentencing Project, author of Race to Incarcerate
“A powerful analysis of why and how mass incarceration is happening in America, The New Jim Crow should be required
reading for anyone working for real change in the criminal justice system.”
—Ronald E. Hampton, Executive Director, National Black Association
About the Author
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Michelle Alexander is an associate professor of law at Ohio State University and holds a joint appointment at the
Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and Ethnicity. Formerly the director of the ACLU’s Racial Justice Project in
Northern California, Alexander served as a law clerk for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmun. Cornel West is
the Class of 1943 University Professor, emeritus, at Princeton University and is currently Professor of Philosophy and
Christian Practice at Union Theological Seminary.