Cadigan Michele, Kirk Gabriela
University of Washington.
Northwestern University.
RSF. 2020 Mar;6(1):113-131. doi: 10.7758/rsf.2020.6.1.05.
Research on court-imposed monetary sanctions has not yet fully examined the impact that processes used to manage court debt have on individuals' lives. Drawing from both interviews and ethnographic data in Illinois and Washington State, we examine how the court's management of justice-related debt affect labor market experiences. We conceptualize these managerial practices as procedural pressure points or mechanisms embedded within these processes that strain individuals' ability to access and maintain stable employment. We find that, as a result, courts undermine their own goal of recouping costs and trap individuals in a cycle of court surveillance.
关于法院强制实施的金钱制裁的研究尚未充分考察用于管理法院债务的程序对个人生活的影响。基于伊利诺伊州和华盛顿州的访谈及人种志数据,我们研究了法院对司法相关债务的管理如何影响劳动力市场经历。我们将这些管理实践概念化为嵌入这些程序中的程序压力点或机制,这些压力点或机制会削弱个人获得和维持稳定就业的能力。我们发现,结果是法院破坏了自己收回成本的目标,并使个人陷入法院监督的循环之中。