Waubonsee Community College

Redistributing the poor, jails, hospitals, and the crisis of law and fiscal austerity, Armando Lara-Millán

Label
Redistributing the poor, jails, hospitals, and the crisis of law and fiscal austerity, Armando Lara-Millán
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Redistributing the poor
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1203963958
Responsibility statement
Armando Lara-Millán
Sub title
jails, hospitals, and the crisis of law and fiscal austerity
Summary
"This book argues that we have drastically misunderstood the changes taking place in our nation's largest jails and public hospitals. And more generally, the way that states govern urban poverty at the turn of the 21st century. It is widely believed that because we as a society have divested in public health the sick and poor now find themselves subject to powerful criminal justice institutions. Rather than focus on the underinvestment of health and overinvestment of criminal justice, this book argues that the fundamental problem of the state is a persistent crisis between budgetary catastrophe and expansive new legal rules. Redistributing the Poor pushes us to think about the circulation of people for the purposes of generating absent revenue, absolving new legal demands, and projecting illusions that crisis have been successfully resolved. This book takes us into the heart of the state: the day-to-day operations of the largest hospital and jail system in the world. It is only by centering the states use of redistribution that we can understand how certain forms of social suffering-the premature death of mainly poor, people of color-are not a result of the state's failure to act, but instead the necessary outcome of so-called successful policy"--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Preface -- Introduction -- Part One: The Expansion of Medicine in Large Urban Jail -- Chapter 1: Summoning the Sick and Violent into Jail -- Chapter 2: The Medicalization of the Los Angeles County Jail System -- Part Two: The Restriction of Medicine in Large Public Hospitals -- Chapter 3: Opioids, Observation, and Restricting Access in the Public Emergency Room -- Chapter 4: Building a Public Hospital Everyone Knows is Too Small -- Conclusion: Towards the Administrative Disappearing of Social Suffering -- Appendix: Historically Embedded Ethnography -- References -- Endnotes
Classification
Content
Mapped to