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Black Men In Jail Research Paper

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Imagine being a child who has not seen their father in years. Not being able to celebrate holidays with a loved one and being a fatherless child. Especially being a black child of an incarceration black male there are many stereotypes that set you aside from other people. For many years in the criminal justice system in America it has been undergoing a massive growth. According the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) there are over two million black men in jail and most of them stay there for a life time. This fact puts a load on the black community because many families are left with no father in a single parent home, the unemployment rate for black male has increased and now it seems like going to jail is a …show more content…

It has deeply affected the problem of single parent household with the black community. When the black men are “locked up”, they typically leave behind a wife or girlfriend and children. Those children spend many years of their lives without a father figure and grow up with many difficulties. According to the NAACP; “2.3 million African American males are serving time in prison and African Americans are incarcerated at nearly six times the rate of whites. Black males outnumber the population of Caucasians, Hispanics, Native Americans and other ethnic groups in the criminal justice system. Large populations of black males drop out of high school and end up in jail. African American males make up 70 percent of the prison population, even though they make up only 6 percent of the US population with lack of education, discrimination, and unemployment connects the norm black males will eventually get nowhere to be found in the prison system.” The outcome of this tragic circumstances families developing without a father, the cycle of great crime, poverty, and great pain to families will often repeat itself according to Nealy, (2008). Dylan and Duran, (2011) agrees, “spending time in prison has become an increasingly common life event for the minority men in the US." It is important to pass on our black young men into someone optimistic and not easily

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