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(Ebook) Murder in New Orleans: The Creation of Jim Crow Policing (Historical Studies of Urban America) by Adler, Jeffrey S. ISBN 9780226643311, 022664331X

  • SKU: EBN-53920076
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Instant download (eBook) Murder in New Orleans: The Creation of Jim Crow Policing (Historical Studies of Urban America) after payment.
Authors:Adler, Jeffrey S.
Pages:280 pages.
Year:2019
Editon:First Edition
Publisher:University of Chicago Press
Language:english
File Size:1.8 MB
Format:pdf
ISBNS:9780226643311, 022664331X
Categories: Ebooks

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(Ebook) Murder in New Orleans: The Creation of Jim Crow Policing (Historical Studies of Urban America) by Adler, Jeffrey S. ISBN 9780226643311, 022664331X

New Orleans in the 1920s and 1930s was a deadly place. In 1925, the city’s homicide rate was six times that of New York City and twelve times that of Boston. Jeffrey S. Adler has explored every homicide recorded in New Orleans between 1925 and 1940—over two thousand in all—scouring police and autopsy reports, old interviews, and crumbling newspapers. More than simply quantifying these cases, Adler places them in larger contexts—legal, political, cultural, and demographic—and emerges with a tale of racism, urban violence, and vicious policing that has startling relevance for today. Murder in New Orleans shows that whites were convicted of homicide at far higher rates than blacks leading up to the mid-1920s. But by the end of the following decade, this pattern had reversed completely, despite an overall drop in municipal crime rates. The injustice of this sharp rise in arrests was compounded by increasingly brutal treatment of black subjects by the New Orleans police department. Adler explores other counterintuitive trends in violence, particularly how murder soared during the flush times of the Roaring Twenties, how it plummeted during the Great Depression, and how the vicious response to African American crime occurred even as such violence plunged in frequency—revealing that the city’s cycle of racial policing and punishment was connected less to actual patterns of wrongdoing than to the national enshrinement of Jim Crow. Rather than some hyperviolent outlier, this Louisiana city was a harbinger of the endemic racism at the center of today’s criminal justice state. Murder in New Orleans lays bare how decades-old crimes, and the racially motivated cruelty of the official response, have baleful resonance in the age of Black Lives Matter.
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