Ph.D. & M.A. Program in Political Science
Link to the Graduate Center Home Page
Capitol Building Municipal Building, New York City Program
Faculty
Parliment, England
Students
Courses
City Hall, New York City The White House Admissions
Financial Resources
Lincoln Memorial
News & Events
The United Nations, exterior
Research Centers
New York Public Library The United Nations, interior Journals
Speaker Series
Parthenon Parliment, Hungary Books
Home
CUNY Graduate Center 365 Fifth Avenue, Room 5202, New York, NY 10016, Phone: (212)817-8670, Fax (212) 817-1532, email: politicalscience@gc.cuny.edu
 
back

 

Joseph Davey, The New Social Contract: America's Journey from Welfare State to Police State (Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 1995)


 


Descriptions:
According to the Justice Department's National Crime Survey, the crime rate in the United States is lower today than it was when Nixon was in the White House. In spite of this, political leaders demand nationwide prison construction as a response to the "war on drugs" and to accommodate the results of the new "three strikes" law. At the same time, the gap between rich and poor is wider than ever and the needs of the "non-disruptive poor" are being ignored by the economic and political elites to the point of unprecedented homelessness. The author predicts this widening gap will prompt the return of 1960s-style civil turmoil which will lead to the end of the "war on drugs" and the emptying of hundreds of thousands of cells so the protesting poor can be plausibly threatened with incarceration.

Book News:
Emerging from the author's Ph.D. dissertation in political science at the Graduate Center of CUNY, this volume examines the massive expansion of funding and legal authority of agencies of social control as a means to "restrain the growing number of disgruntled poor who have watched their jobs relocate to the Third World and their government reduce its commitment to abolishing poverty." It examines changes in public policy concerning poverty, inequality, welfare, and homelessness, and then compares those policies and expenditures with the policies concerning criminal justice over the past two decades. Shows the expert tutelage of Francis Fox Piven, whose guidance the author acknowledges. Annotation copyright Book News, Inc. Portland, Or.

"In this lively and bracing book, Joe Davey points to the underlying connections between shrinking social policy budgets and rapidly rising prison budgets. Each provide a kind of solution: social policies ameliorate poverty by reducing want and expanding opportunities; criminal policies "solve" the problem of poverty by labeling and incarcerating ever-larger numbers of people. His argument is a chilling and convincing commentary on contemporary American politics, and it needs to be read."
Frances Fox Piven, Graduate Center, City University of New York

Skyline