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In Stick Together and Come Back Home, Patrick Lopez-Aguado examines how what happens inside a prison affects what happens outside of it. Following the experiences of seventy youth and adults as they navigate juvenile justice and penal facilities before finally going back home, he outlines how institutional authorities structure a "carceral social order" that racially and geographically divides criminalized populations into gang-associated affiliations. These affiliations come to shape one's exposure to both violence and criminal labeling, and as they spill over the institutional walls they establish how these unfold in high-incarceration neighborhoods as well, revealing the insidious set of consequences that mass incarceration holds for poor communities of color.
Prisoners --- Prison gangs --- Race discrimination --- Social control --- Prison administration --- Administration of prisons --- Prison management --- Prisons --- Management --- Social conflict --- Sociology --- Liberty --- Pressure groups --- Bias, Racial --- Discrimination, Racial --- Race bias --- Racial bias --- Racial discrimination --- Discrimination --- Gangs --- Convicts --- Correctional institutions --- Imprisoned persons --- Incarcerated persons --- Prison inmates --- Inmates of institutions --- Persons --- Social conditions. --- Violence against --- Administration --- Inmates --- carceral social order. --- criminal labeling. --- criminal rehabilitation. --- impact of mass incarceration on communities. --- institutional behavior. --- juvenile justice. --- life after prison. --- mass incarceration. --- penal violence. --- prison administration. --- prison life. --- race and prisons. --- racial division in prisons. --- racism in prisons. --- social impact of incarceration. --- surviving prison. --- transitioning back home after prison. --- violence against prisoners. --- violence in prison.
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