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22 Punishment & Soc'y 3 (2020)

handle is hein.journals/punscty22 and id is 1 raw text is: 



Article


                                                                Punishment & Society
                                                                2020, Vol. 22(l) 3-27
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                                                              Article reuse guidelines:
punishm         ent:                                   sagepub.com/journals-permissions
                                                       DOI: 10.I 177/1462474518816643

Ethno-political exclusion,                               .....assagepub.com/hore/pun

colonial institutional                                              $SAGE

legacies, and

incarceration




Andrew P Davis and
Michael Gibson-Light
University of Arizona, USA




Abstract
One dominant theoretical explanation for higher incarceration rates across the world
focuses on how a nation's level of diversity or minority presence broadly writ unleashes
racial resentment that can lead to incarceration. This article contends that population
heterogeneity alone offers an incomplete picture of how ethnic-based tension can affect
incarceration rates. Rather, we argue that majority ethnic groups around the world use
prison systems in order to govern and manage minority populations, especially those
systematically excluded from power. In addition, we argue that these political structures
have their roots in a nation's colonial legacy, a legacy that shapes a nation's contempo-
rary incarceration rates. Results from our quantitative analysis reveal that controlling
for competing explanations, there are positive associations between ethnic political
exclusion and the length and form of a nation's colonial experience and rates of
incarceration.


Keywords
cross-national analysis, ethnicity, incarceration






Corresponding author:
Andrew P Davis, University of Arizona, 400 Social Sciences Bldg., Tucson, AZ 85719, USA.
Email: andrewpdavis@email.arizona.edu

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