Home

Site information

Subscribe

Store

Donate

Back Issues

News Archives
by Date

News Archives
by Category

Contact Us

Send Us a
News Story

Write for AR

Interviews with
Jared Taylor

AR in the News

AR Attic

Activists

Links



Amren store on Amazon.com
Buy through this link and help AR


Atom news feed
RSS 1.0 news feed
RSS 2.0 news feed
American Renaissance

Previous Story       Next Story       View Comments       Post a Comment       Send This Page

Racial Segregation Continues in California Prisons

AR Articles on Segregation
Who Still Believes in Integration? (Sep. 1993)
Having it Both Ways (May 1997)
“A Choice to Be Whole” (July 2001)
Diversity Does Not Equal Integration (May 2001)
Segregation to the Rescue (June 2000)
Schools Resegregate (July 1999)
Search AmRen.com for Segregation
More news stories on Segregation
Reuters, Feb. 21

SAN FRANCISCO, California—In one of the darkest corners of California, a state that prides itself on its liberal values, official racial segregation lives on, impacting hundreds of thousands of prison inmates.

When criminals arrive at a state prison, guards typically divide them by race to reduce what California’s Department of Corrections calls “anti-social behavior.”

Even when the races are mixed after an initial 60-day reception period, prisoners often interact mostly and sometimes exclusively with members of their own race.

{snip}

Roderick Hickman, secretary of the California Youth and Adult Correctional Agency overseeing California’s 32 prisons and 163,000 inmates, says prisons only reflect a racially divided America.

“To have an expectation … that the prison environment was going to stop people from associating with like members of their own group—hey, I’d be asking for a Nobel Peace Prize if you’d get that done,” he said. “If you go into the schools, if you go into our communities, people are somewhat divided into their own groups, so I think it is a big task to say that we’re going to do something more in the prisons than people are doing in their own communities.”

Experts say prison gangs such as the Mexican Mafia also exert pressure on prisoners to self-segregate.

“If you’re a Hispanic and Hispanic gang members see you talking to a a Caucasian or a black person, they’ll beat the hell out of you, so what do you do?” said one prison official who did not want to be named. “In other words, some of the segregation is imposed by the prisoners.”

“There seems to be more pressure in some races than others. In California there is more pressure, you know, by Hispanic gangs. In parts of Texas there is more pressure in the white Aryan Brotherhood-type gangs.”

{snip}

Original article

(Posted on February 22, 2005)

     Previous story       Next Story       Post a Comment     Send This Page      Search

Comments


Home      Top      Previous story       Next Story      Send This Page      Search

Post a Comment

Commenting guidelines: We welcome comments that add information or perspective, and we encourage polite debate. Statements of fact and well-considered opinion are welcome, but we will not post comments that include obscenities or insults, whether of groups or individuals. We reserve the right to hold our critics to lower standards.




Remember Me?

(you may use HTML tags for style)