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Legal Plunder: The Predatory Dimensions of Criminal Justice

Contributor(s): Page, Joshua (Author), Soss, Joe (Author)

ISBN: 9780226841168

Publisher: University of Chicago Press

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Pub Date: August 12, 2025

Dewey: 364.973

LCCN: 2024054323

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Index

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 1.00" H x 8.90" L x 6.00" W ( 1.23 lbs) 448 pages

Series: Chicago Studies in American Politics

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: "Alongside the rise of mass incarceration, a second profound development has transpired. Since the 1980s, US policing and punishment have been remade into tools for stripping resources from the nation's most oppressed communities and turning them into public and private revenues. Legal plunder explores this development's origins, operations, consequences, and the political struggles that surround it. Leveraging historical and contemporary evidence and original ethnographic research, Joshua Page and Joe Soss analyze what they call the predatory dimensions of criminal legal governance. Readers will learn how, as tax burdens have declined for the affluent, practices that criminalize, police, and punish have been retrofitted to siphon resources from subordinated groups, subsidize governments, and generate corporate profits. Financial extraction, now a core function of the country's sprawling criminal legal apparatus, compounds race, class, and gender inequalities and injustices. We can no longer afford to overlook legal plunder or the efforts to dismantle it"--

Brief description:

Joe Soss is the Cowles Professor for the Study of Public Service in the Hubert H. Humphrey School of Public Affairs at the University of Minnesota.

Review Quotes: "For decades, scholars have pondered whether profit-seeking or the politics of punitiveness was the truest explanation for American mass incarceration. Legal Plunder demonstrates with astounding precision the perfect merger of these goals in a system of ruthless resource extraction that can both warehouse people and make them a productive source of wealth. As the authors show, this is a criminal legal system that deserves the alarming metaphor of 'predation.'"--Jonathan Simon University of California-Berkeley

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