Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
“Hatcher, a professor of law and advocate for social justice, delivers a well-researched, scholarly, disturbing synthesis of social history and legal treatise, tracking the long-term monetization of the justice system. . . . A useful, bleak exposé of a little-understood legal labyrinth constructed to harm the most vulnerable.” * Kirkus Reviews *
"Hatcher meticulously reveals a nefarious, unethical operation within juvenile and criminal justice systems. . . . This book will serve as a valuable contribution to many fields and provides an insightful resource for educators, families, and communities." * CHOICE *
"Hatcher’s Injustice, Inc. provides an entirely new line of inquiry examining the hidden internal juvenile legal practices that center on capturing money— from federal funds to individuals’ income and assets. This book provides a dizzying eye opening deep dive into the juvenile legal system to highlight the strategies and practices which courts, police, prosecutors, probation offices, and confinement institutions use to generate revenue for state and local jurisdictions and even for personal profit." * Social Forces *
“Daniel L. Hatcher, in his book Injustice, Inc., describes in detail a frankly apartheid system finely designed to milk every source of revenue from poor children.. He describes ‘factory-like operations’, ‘industrialization of harm’, ‘child support mercenaries’. He quotes official contracts that describe foster children as ‘units’, children as ‘data match algorithms’ for ‘predictive analytics’, and children as a ‘revenue generating mechanism.’ Paraphrasing poet Walt Whitman: ‘Out of the cradle endlessly rocking … [to] death, death, death, death.’” * Counterpunch *

Table of Contents
Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction

1. Crumbling Foundations of Justice
2. Juvenile Courts Monetizing Child Removals
3. Judicial Child Support Factory
4. Prosecuting the Poor for Profit
5. The Probation Business
6. Policing and Profiting from the Poor
7. Bodies in the Beds: The Business of Jailing Children and the Poor
8. Racialized Harm of the Injustice Enterprise
Conclusion

Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index

Injustice Inc. How Americas Justice System

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£64.00

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RRP £80.00 – you save £16.00 (20%)

Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 20 Dec 2025.

A Hardback by Daniel L. Hatcher

1 in stock


    View other formats and editions of Injustice Inc. How Americas Justice System by Daniel L. Hatcher

    Publisher: University of California Press
    Publication Date: 21/02/2023
    ISBN13: 9780520386679, 978-0520386679
    ISBN10: 0520386671

    Description

    Book Synopsis


    Trade Review
    “Hatcher, a professor of law and advocate for social justice, delivers a well-researched, scholarly, disturbing synthesis of social history and legal treatise, tracking the long-term monetization of the justice system. . . . A useful, bleak exposé of a little-understood legal labyrinth constructed to harm the most vulnerable.” * Kirkus Reviews *
    "Hatcher meticulously reveals a nefarious, unethical operation within juvenile and criminal justice systems. . . . This book will serve as a valuable contribution to many fields and provides an insightful resource for educators, families, and communities." * CHOICE *
    "Hatcher’s Injustice, Inc. provides an entirely new line of inquiry examining the hidden internal juvenile legal practices that center on capturing money— from federal funds to individuals’ income and assets. This book provides a dizzying eye opening deep dive into the juvenile legal system to highlight the strategies and practices which courts, police, prosecutors, probation offices, and confinement institutions use to generate revenue for state and local jurisdictions and even for personal profit." * Social Forces *
    “Daniel L. Hatcher, in his book Injustice, Inc., describes in detail a frankly apartheid system finely designed to milk every source of revenue from poor children.. He describes ‘factory-like operations’, ‘industrialization of harm’, ‘child support mercenaries’. He quotes official contracts that describe foster children as ‘units’, children as ‘data match algorithms’ for ‘predictive analytics’, and children as a ‘revenue generating mechanism.’ Paraphrasing poet Walt Whitman: ‘Out of the cradle endlessly rocking … [to] death, death, death, death.’” * Counterpunch *

    Table of Contents
    Contents

    Acknowledgments

    Introduction

    1. Crumbling Foundations of Justice
    2. Juvenile Courts Monetizing Child Removals
    3. Judicial Child Support Factory
    4. Prosecuting the Poor for Profit
    5. The Probation Business
    6. Policing and Profiting from the Poor
    7. Bodies in the Beds: The Business of Jailing Children and the Poor
    8. Racialized Harm of the Injustice Enterprise
    Conclusion

    Notes
    Selected Bibliography
    Index

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