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Publish date: Sunday 23 October 2022
view count : 109
create date : Sunday, October 23, 2022 | 12:28 PM
publish date : Sunday, October 23, 2022 | 12:24 PM
update date : Sunday, October 23, 2022 | 12:28 PM

Slavery is still allowed in U.S. prisons. Now it’s on the ballot in 5 states.

  • Slavery is still allowed in U.S. prisons. Now it’s on the ballot in 5 states.
Five U.S. states will vote this November on whether to eliminate language in their state constitutions that allows slavery as punishment in prisons, an exception written into the 13th Amendment, which abolished slavery more than 150 years ago.

Experts say the bills — which are on the ballot in Tennessee, Alabama, Louisiana, Oregon and Vermont — could buoy growing prison-reform efforts in a country where roughly 800,000 prisoners work, often being forced to do so and for little to no pay. The 13th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution bans slavery or involuntary servitude, except when it is used as punishment for a crime.

If passed, the proposals would wholly abolish slavery in those states, though they would not automatically change protocols on prison labor or inmate pay. While not all states have constitutions that explicitly permit slavery and involuntary servitude as criminal punishments, only three have passed similar legislation to remove the exception — Colorado was the first to do so in 2018, followed by Nebraska and Utah two years later.

“This is the beginning of a wave,” said Sharon Dolovich, a law professor at the University of California at Los Angeles and an expert on prison law. “I suspect that in 10 years maybe we’ll be horrified that, in 2022, most states had this on the books.”

Experts say that the bills, in spirit, open a conversation about greater issues with the U.S. prison system, which has the highest incarceration rate of any country in the world and disproportionately imprisons Black people, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.

“We have to come to terms with the fact that the very amendment that freed the slaves has a clause to re-enslave them,” said Robert Chase, an associate professor at Stony Brook University and the director of Historians Against Slavery, a collective of scholars and activists. “For an entire generation, it put Black men and women back into slavery by incarcerating them and selling their labor to private corporations.”

They’re in federal prison, and they’re done staying quiet

Prison workers in the U.S. produce about $2 billion a year in goods and commodities and more than $9 billion a year in services that maintain prisons, according to the ACLU. Meanwhile, they’re paid nothing in seven states and an average of about 52 cents per hour nationally, according to a report published by the group earlier this year. In many cases, they keep less than half of what they earn after deductions for tax, room and board, and other fees.

Prisoners who refuse to work are also often punished, Chase and Dolovich said, sometimes with solitary confinement or the erasure of sentence reductions for good behavior.

In 2002, the Supreme Court reviewed a case, broadly about prison officials’ immunity from liability, in which an Alabama inmate was chained to a hitching post in a standing position for seven hours under the sun. The post was used as a punishment for those who refused to work as part of a chain gang, and the Supreme Court determined that it qualified as unconstitutional “cruel and unusual punishment.”
Members of the Maricopa County DUI chain gang are escorted to an assignment in Phoenix in 2007.

In 2016, forced labor and poor wages ultimately led to the largest prison strike in U.S. history, with an estimated 24,000 inmates refusing to work in at least 12 states. Last month, inmates in Alabama also went on strike, paralyzing prison operations by refusing to work in laundry rooms or janitorial services, the Associated Press reported.

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