Description

Book Synopsis

Humans are a species that classifies. We arrange the flow of the things and events that we see and experience, place them into categories, and erect boundaries around those categories. Among the boundaries that we erect are those that we put around groups of “other” human beings. The evil side of human classification of other human beings is that we sometimes create false categories of other people, as is often the case in racial, ethnic, and religious stereotypes. This unmindful creation of empty categories of human characteristics is what happened during two periods crucial to the construction of race in America. This is racism.

The United States is in a period of deep cultural flux and conflict, much of it seen through the lens of race. Tom Diaz proposes that the everyday actions of ordinary people, in the context of extreme political and cultural polarization, distort the criminal justice system and betray the lofty ideals expressed in American founding documents and centuries of Anglo-American articulations of basic human rights. These everyday actions range across a spectrum from the armed intervention of private citizens in the forms of individual action, neighborhood watches, and citizen’s arrests, to the expectations imposed on law enforcement, in particular, and the criminal justice system in general.



Trade Review

The scales of justice, if they were ever intact, are broken in America. As Tom Diaz shows in this wide-ranging and hard-hitting book, the legacy of slavery and Jim Crow is a justice system warped by racism.

-- Ariela Gross, University of Southern California

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: The Lens of Racial Perception

Chapter 2: Alabama—A Notional Fiction

Chapter 3: Midnight Matters

Chapter 4: Victims

Chapter 5: Heritage

Chapter 6: The Assembly Line

Chapter 7: Through a Lens Darkly

Chapter 8: No N-Words Anywhere

Broken Scales: Race and the Crisis of Justice in

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Fri 26 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Tom Diaz

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      View other formats and editions of Broken Scales: Race and the Crisis of Justice in by Tom Diaz

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 21/10/2023
      ISBN13: 9781538189375, 978-1538189375
      ISBN10: 1538189372

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Humans are a species that classifies. We arrange the flow of the things and events that we see and experience, place them into categories, and erect boundaries around those categories. Among the boundaries that we erect are those that we put around groups of “other” human beings. The evil side of human classification of other human beings is that we sometimes create false categories of other people, as is often the case in racial, ethnic, and religious stereotypes. This unmindful creation of empty categories of human characteristics is what happened during two periods crucial to the construction of race in America. This is racism.

      The United States is in a period of deep cultural flux and conflict, much of it seen through the lens of race. Tom Diaz proposes that the everyday actions of ordinary people, in the context of extreme political and cultural polarization, distort the criminal justice system and betray the lofty ideals expressed in American founding documents and centuries of Anglo-American articulations of basic human rights. These everyday actions range across a spectrum from the armed intervention of private citizens in the forms of individual action, neighborhood watches, and citizen’s arrests, to the expectations imposed on law enforcement, in particular, and the criminal justice system in general.



      Trade Review

      The scales of justice, if they were ever intact, are broken in America. As Tom Diaz shows in this wide-ranging and hard-hitting book, the legacy of slavery and Jim Crow is a justice system warped by racism.

      -- Ariela Gross, University of Southern California

      Table of Contents

      Chapter 1: The Lens of Racial Perception

      Chapter 2: Alabama—A Notional Fiction

      Chapter 3: Midnight Matters

      Chapter 4: Victims

      Chapter 5: Heritage

      Chapter 6: The Assembly Line

      Chapter 7: Through a Lens Darkly

      Chapter 8: No N-Words Anywhere

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