Let's Get Free

  • November 25, 2009
    BookTalk
    Let's Get Free
    A Hip-Hop Theory of Justice
    By: 
    Paul Butler

    By Paul Butler, Associate Dean for Faculty Development & Carville Dickinson Benson Research Professor of Law, The George Washington University Law School

    Let's Get Free: A Hip-Hop Theory of Justice is about why locking up so many people is bad for the average law-abiding citizen. It might not be a thesis you'd expect from me, a former prosecutor, but making the streets safer is exactly why I wrote the book.

    The U.S. has the highest rate of incarceration in the history of the planet. We have 5 percent of the world's population, and 25 percent of the world's prisoners. Let's Get Free's main argument focuses on the "tipping point" that criminologists have demonstrated about this level of incarceration. When too many people are locked up, the crime rate actually goes up. Too much prison has the ironic consequence of being crimogenic.

    Let's Get Free suggests ways that we can safely reduce the number of people in prison. In addition to safer streets, a big advantage would be the diversion of billions of dollars out of locking people up (which costs about $50,000 annually per inmate) and back to more productive areas like education, health care and the environment. The fixes that Let's Get Free recommends range from helping at-risk students graduate from high school, to getting lead out of the environment (a high percentage of the people in prison for non-drug related crimes suffered lead poisoning as a child, which affects their brain in a way that makes them more violence-prone) to ending racial profiling.

    The book also includes more controversial recommendations, including strategic jury nullification to protest the war on drugs. Let's Get Free calls for "Martin Luther King jurors" who would consider acquitting defendants in non-violent drug cases, even if the defendant is technically guilty. This kind of protest is perfectly legal, and was credited with hastening the end of alcohol prohibition, the government's last failed "war on drugs."

  • July 27, 2009
    George Washington University Law School professor Paul Butler will lead a multi-media presentation about his new book, Let's Get Free: A Hip-Hop Theory of Justice, at a July 30 event sponsored by ACS. Professor Butler in Let's Get Free addresses the nation's burgeoning incarceration and advances criminal justice alternatives.

    Butler was recently featured at the Chicago Lit Festival, where he talked with University of Chicago Law School professor Geoffrey R. Stone about the book. Butler said that in addition to a punitive culture, "we have this dysfunctional politics of criminal justice, where politicians think the way to get votes is to lock up more and more people. So we have much stricter sentences than other industrialized nations - really more strict than virtually any country in the history of the free world." Video of Butler's entire discussion is here. Butler also was part of The New York Times special commentary on the arrest of the prominent Harvard University scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr. Butler's commentary, "More Ways of Looking at a Black Man," is available here.

    For more information about the July 30 ACS event in Washington, D.C. featuring Professor Butler, visit here. The event starts at 6:30 p.m. at the Left Bank, 2424 18th Street, NW.