Digitize and Punish, Brian Jefferson
Digitize and Punish, Brian Jefferson
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Digitize and Punish
Racial Criminalization in the Digital Age

Author: Brian Jefferson

Narrator: Leon Nixon

Unabridged: 8 hr 6 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 06/10/2020


Synopsis

The US Bureau of Justice Statistics estimates that law enforcement agencies have access to more than 100 million names stored in criminal history databases. In some cities, 80 percent of the black male population is registered in these databases. Digitize and Punish explores the long history of digital computing and criminal justice, revealing how big tech, computer scientists, university researchers, and state actors have digitized carceral governance over the past forty years—with devastating impact on poor communities of color.

Providing a comprehensive study of the use of digital technology in American criminal justice, Brian Jefferson shows how the technology has expanded the wars on crime and drugs, enabling our current state of mass incarceration and further entrenching the nation's racialized policing and punishment. After examining how the criminal justice system conceptualized the benefits of computers to surveil criminalized populations, Jefferson focuses on New York City and Chicago to provide a grounded account of the deployment of digital computing in urban police departments.

By highlighting the intersection of policing and punishment with big data and web technology, Digitize and Punish makes clear the extent to which digital technologies have transformed and intensified the nature of carceral power.

About Brian Jefferson

Brian Jefferson is associate professor of geography and geographic information science at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Sam

This book enumerated the vast infrastructures of criminalizing surveillance with detail and precision. The “panopticon” of state surveillance is realized by a concrete, material collection of nodes and technologies that feed databases in order to control criminalized populations. This book is essent......more

Goodreads review by Ash

Jefferson does an excellent job of detailing the history of digital technology’s thorough integration into the US police apparatus and carceral system. Further, Jefferson clearly explains how the history of tech + criminal justice has allowed racist policing practices to deepen, expand, and, most di......more

Goodreads review by Xavier

A super interesting history of the growth of carceral surveillance and how it intertwines with racilized criminalization. I also appreciate how it grounds its discussion in developments in Chicago and New York to give us a sense of the scale and trajectory as well as how people are in struggle to re......more