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Punishing Pregnancy Article on Shackling of Pregnant Prisoners Pricilla Ocen Cal. L. Rev. 2012

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PUNISHING PREGNANCY: RACE, INCARCERATION, AND..., 100 Cal. L. Rev. 1239

100 Cal. L. Rev. 1239
California Law Review
October, 2012
Article
PUNISHING PREGNANCY: RACE, INCARCERATION,
AND THE SHACKLING OF PREGNANT PRISONERS a1
Priscilla A. Ocen a2
Copyright (c) 2012 California Law Review, Inc., a California Nonprofit Corporation; Priscilla A. Ocen
The shackling of pregnant prisoners during labor and childbirth is endemic within women's penal institutions in the United
States. This Article investigates the factors that account for the pervasiveness of this practice and suggests doctrinal innovations
that may be leveraged to prevent its continuation. At a general level, this Article asserts that we cannot understand the
persistence of the shackling of female prisoners without understanding how historical constructions of race and gender operate
structurally to both motivate and mask its use. More specifically, this Article contends that while shackling affects female
prisoners of all races today, the persistent practice attaches to Black women in particular through the historical devaluation,
regulation, and punishment of their exercise of reproductive capacity in three contexts: slavery, convict leasing, and chain
gangs in the South. The regulation and punishment of Black women within these oppressive systems reinforced and reproduced
stereotypes of these women as deviant and dangerous. In turn, as Southern penal practices proliferated in the United States
and Black women became a significant percentage of the female *1240 prison population, these images began to animate
harsh practices against all female prisoners.
Moreover, this Article asserts that current jurisprudence concerning the Eighth Amendment, the primary constitutional vehicle
for challenging conditions of confinement, such as shackling, is insufficient to combat racialized practices at the structural
level. Current doctrine focuses on the subjective intentions of prison officials at the individual level and omits any consideration
of how race underlies institutional practices. Instead, this Article suggests an expanded reading of the Eighth Amendment and
the “evolving standards of decency” language that undergirds the “cruel and unusual punishments” clause. Specifically, this
Article argues that evolving standards of decency should be guided by other constitutional provisions, such as the Thirteenth
Amendment. This expanded reading, which this Article refers to as the “antisubordination approach,” draws upon Justice
Harlan's oft-cited dissent in Plessy v. Ferguson and his underappreciated reading of the Thirteenth Amendment therein. Under
such a reading, conditions of confinement that result from or are related to repudiated mechanisms of racial domination should
be deemed “cruel and unusual punishments.” By challenging race and gender subordination at the structural level, this Article
suggests that can move from an aspiration to the actualization of humane justice.

I.

II.

Introduction
Incarceration and the Shackling of Female Prisoners During Pregnancy
A. Control over the Exercise of Women's Reproductive Capacity in the Criminal Justice
System
B. Shackling of Pregnant Women in Prison and the Attendant Psychological and Physical
Harms
Slavery, Reconstruction-Era Punishment, and Constructions of Black Womanhood

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III.

IV.

A. Racial and Gender Constructs of Black Women During Slavery and Post-Civil War
Punishment Regimes
1. Masculinization
2. Sexual Deviance
3. Maternal Devaluation
4. Dangerousness
B. The Second Reconstruction, Black Women, and the “New” Carceral Regime
The Invisibility of Race and Gender Within Eighth Amendment Doctrinal Discourses
A. The Current Constitutional Standard for Evaluating Conditions of Confinement
Claims Under the Eighth Amendment
B. Doctrinal Elision of Race and Gender in Eighth Amendment Challenges to the
Shackling of Pregnant Prisoners
C. Persistence of Shackling Practices
Unshackling the Pregnant Body: The Liberatory Potential of Reading the Eighth
Amendment in Light of the Thirteenth
A. An Antisubordination Reading of the Eighth Amendment
1. Conditions of Confinement as Punishment
2. Objective Measures of Contemporary Values, the Thirteenth Amendment, and the
Shackling of Pregnant Prisoners
a. The Thirteenth Amendment as a Symbol of Contemporary Values
b. Standing to Bring Antisubordination Claim
c. Exception Clause No Bar to Symbolic Value of Thirteenth Amendment in the Context
of Prison
B. Social Meaning of the Shackling of Pregnant Prisoners and Conflict with the
Antisubordination Values of the Thirteenth Amendment
Conclusion

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*1241 Introduction
One might have hoped that, by this hour, the very sight of chains on Black flesh, or the very sight of chains, would be so
intolerable a sight for the American people, and so unbearable a memory, that they would themselves spontaneously rise up
and strike off the manacles. But, no, they appear to glory in their chains; now, more than ever, they appear to measure their
safety in chains and corpses. 1

Olivia Hamilton, a Black 2 woman, was held in a Georgia jail. 3 She was pregnant at the time of her conviction. 4 Despite her
pregnancy, she often found it difficult to see a doctor because of the indifference of the guards and the overcrowding in the
prison. 5 When the pains of labor harkened the arrival of *1242 her baby, the shackles placed around her wrists compounded
her agony. 6 Despite being admitted to the hospital for a cesarean delivery, the birth of her child imminent, she remained under
the close supervision of armed prison staff and was shackled throughout the procedure. 7
Nearly one hundred years earlier, Elvira, also a Black woman, was sentenced to Eastham State Farm, 8 a prison camp in
rural Texas populated by Black men and women, for a minor offense. 9 Although Elvira was pregnant at the time she was
sentenced, her status as an expectant mother received no consideration. 10 While incarcerated, prisoners, including those who
were pregnant, were forced to engage in arduous labor to maintain the prison's expansive physical plant and were also leased
out to local industries to perform backbreaking labor. 11 When Elvira complained of pregnancy pains and the possible onset of
labor, she was not provided any assistance and was instead given a heavy workload on the prison yard. 12 In the midst of this
pain, Elvira gave birth, delivering the child herself, under a magnolia tree near the prison barracks. 13 Elvira remained under

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the tree, her baby beside her, until another prisoner heard her cries and rendered assistance. Because of the lack of medical
assistance, the baby contracted pneumonia and died a few days after his birth. 14
Olivia and Elvira have similar stories. Both are poor African American women. Both were subject to dehumanizing and
degrading conditions of *1243 confinement that devalued their pregnancies. Both were also subject to particularized forms of
state violence inasmuch as the women's pregnancies were occasions for profound humiliation and abuse. Yet their experiences
are separated by more than one hundred years. How is it, then, that there are so many continuities in their treatment?
In this Article, I explore this question, with a particular focus on the historical constructions of Black women, the denigration of
their reproductive capacities, and their relationship to the practice of shackling pregnant prisoners during labor and childbirth. In
the contemporary context, some feminist scholars have argued that shackling of pregnant prisoners stems from the unthinking
exportation of “prison rules . . . to a hospital setting.” 15 Others argue that the practice is based on a male-centric approach
to corrections that has not been adapted to fit the needs of female prisoners. For example, criminologist Meda ChesneyLind suggests that “[l]ittle or no thought was given to the possibility of a female prisoner until she appeared at the door of
the institution. It was as though crime and punishment existed in a world in which gender equaled male.” 16 To contest the
unthinking or androcentric use of shackles on pregnant women in prisons across the country, advocates have turned to the Eighth
Amendment's “cruel and unusual punishments” clause as a remedy. The clause's lenient standard seeks to determine whether
a guard was indifferent to the medical needs of a prisoner. I contend, however, that these frames posited by feminist scholars
are insufficiently attentive to the structural role of race and gender in women's prison practices and overestimate the ability
of current Eighth Amendment jurisprudence to halt, at an institutional level, the use of shackles during labor and childbirth
as a condition of confinement.
I argue in this Article that race and gender are at the heart of the practice of shackling female prisoners during labor and
childbirth. The intersection of race and gender explains why female prisoners are at once masculinized, yet uniquely punished
as women during pregnancy and childbirth. More specifically, the examination of the intersection of race and gender in the
context of stereotypes about Black women demonstrates how the mechanisms of subordination, including criminalization and
incarceration, have evolved since the era of chattel slavery to facilitate the marginalization of racialized 17 women. When
framed in this manner, the shackling of pregnant prisoners *1244 appears as a manifestation of the punishment of “unfit” or
“undesirable” women for exercising the choice to become mothers. 18 Within the prevailing punishment regime, undesirability
is synonymous with race, as the impulse to punish such women is rooted in the stereotypical constructions of Black women.
The widespread use of shackles on pregnant prisoners is premised on constructions of Black feminine deviance that were
outgrowths of earlier regimes of punishment, such as post-Civil War era convict leasing 19 and chain gangs. 20 It is well
understood that contemporary crime and punishment policy and stereotypes about Black men are both informed by the
criminalization of Black men during the post-Civil War era. 21 Scholars, such as Michelle Alexander, have argued that the
criminalization of Black men in this era *1245 formed the bedrock for the modern phenomenon of mass incarceration. 22
Less well understood, however, is the way in which Black women's subjugation during slavery and punishment regimes in
the post-Civil War era shaped stereotypes of Black women, views of female prisoners, and modern prison policy. This Article
seeks to fill this discursive gap. Drawing upon Black feminist and intersectionality theory, 23 I argue that post-Civil War era
punishment regimes served to define the boundaries of womanhood and those boundaries were in turn used to identify which
women should be labeled as “criminal.” While Black men were seen as physically violent, Black women were seen as dangerous
through a sexualized lens, one that often focused on reproduction. The way in which Black women and female prisoners became
synonymous over time reveals the mutually constitutive relationship between Black women and prison. 24

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While the prison system has expanded as a mechanism for the governance of economically and racially marginalized
populations, 25 incarcerated women's reproductive capacities have remained a site of subordination. What began as a mechanism
to control and demean Black women has become the prevailing mechanism for the treatment of all female prisoners. Indeed,
the formative years of the women's penal system in the United States occurred at a historical moment in which crime was
deployed to maintain racialized and gendered boundaries. 26 Those boundaries now constitute the institutional parameters in
which modern women's prisons operate. 27 This is particularly true given the ways in which Southern prison practices informed
practices nationwide as the *1246 United States turned to a more retributivist philosophy of incarceration in the 1970s. 28
Consequently, the punitive orientation toward female prisoners, who were nearly all Black in the post-Civil War era, 29 has
become the standard operating procedure in contemporary prisons. 30 Therefore, the presumed race and gender identity of
female prisoners has played an essential role in normalizing the use of shackles on pregnant prisoners, not only in formal
incarcerative spaces, such as prisons, but also in institutions, such as detention centers, that have come to resemble prisons in
critical respects. 31
A racial and gendered analysis of the use of shackles on pregnant prisoners reveals fundamental deficiencies within Eighth
Amendment doctrine given its inability to engage in a race-conscious and historically contextualized analysis of conditions
of confinement. As Sharon Dolovich and Alice Ristroph have noted, Eighth Amendment jurisprudence, and the “deliberate
indifference” standard announced by the Supreme Court in a line of cases beginning with Estelle v. Gamble, 32 is insufficiently
structural in its scope. 33 Rather, the doctrinal framework for “cruel and unusual punishments” is focused on the harmful intent
of individual actors rather than institutions, and views conditions of confinement from the perspective of the perpetrator instead
of the prisoner.
This Article adds to these critiques by arguing that Eighth Amendment jurisprudence is inadequate, not only because of its focus
on individual actors, but also because of its inability to uproot the structural dynamics around race and gender that facilitate
the continuation of harsh practices such as shackling during labor and childbirth. 34 Moreover, it elides any discussion of
race and *1247 gender in structuring the environment in which the practice takes place and ignores historical antecedents to
contemporary shackling practices. In short, the current Eighth Amendment conditions of confinement jurisprudence is unable to
contest the racial and gender stereotypes of female prisoners that render them vulnerable to shackling practices. Nor is the current
doctrinal framework able to recognize the historical role of prisons in regulating the reproductive autonomy of women, 35
particularly Black women, and the role of such control in maintaining racial subordination and hierarchy. 36 Cases that have
considered the constitutionality of shackling practices, such as Nelson v. Correctional Medical Services 37 and Brawley v.
Washington, 38 bear out this point. In both cases, the doctrinal framework for “cruel and unusual punishments,” which is
narrowly focused on individual actors rather than institutions, functions to obscure race and ignores historical antecedents to
contemporary shackling practices.
The invisibility of Black women within juridical discourse frustrates our ability to engage in a structural critique of prison
practices, such as the shackling of pregnant women during childbirth, and to understand the social meanings attached to such
practices. The absence of a race- and gender-conscious structural critique of shackling practices might explain why reports
*1248 of shackling continue to emerge even in jurisdictions that have either limited or outright banned the use of shackles
on pregnant prisoners. For example, in Illinois, the first state to ban the use of shackles on pregnant prisoners during labor
and childbirth, female prisoners filed a class-action lawsuit alleging the continued use of shackles on pregnant prisoners in a
manner prohibited by state law. 39

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A more robust reading of the Eighth Amendment can address the overlapping systems of subordination that operate within
the contemporary carceral regime. In order to develop a doctrinal framework that can capture the historical construction and
subjugation of Black womanhood, the Court must move beyond its narrow moorings to subjective intent in Eighth Amendment
doctrine and instead embrace a broader approach that is centered on “evolving standards of decency” and a race- and genderconscious definition of cruelty.
The Court often looks to legislative trends and jury deliberations in defining “evolving standards of decency.” I suggest however,
that to ascertain those evolving standards of decency, the Eighth Amendment's “cruel and unusual punishments” inquiry
should be guided by the values underlying the Thirteenth Amendment and its prohibition against the “badges and incidents
of slavery.” 40 This approach, which I will call the “antisubordination approach,” would interpret the Eighth Amendment
to take into account the intent of the Framers of the Reconstruction Amendments not only to eliminate slavery as a formal
matter, but also to eradicate the racial hierarchy upon which the system rested. In making this argument, I draw upon Justice
Harlan's expansive reading of the aims of the Thirteenth Amendment in his oft-cited dissent in Plessy v. Ferguson. 41 While
his antisubordination framing of the Constitution has had particular traction in the context of the Fourteenth Amendment, 42
his articulation of the Thirteenth Amendment has gone largely unexamined. A move toward an antisubordination reading of the
Eighth Amendment not only allows for a robust structural critique of practices in prison, but also encourages *1249 a normative
orientation in defining “cruelty,” 43 which would prohibit punishments that are rooted in or facilitate racial dominance. This
normative orientation, however, is not only protective of Black women; rather, it seeks to disrupt racialized practices that
animate the punitive practices that impact all incarcerated women. In this way, the antisubordination approach is attentive to
the ways in which penal practices rooted in racial dominance undergird the treatment of all people within carceral spaces.
In Part I, I describe the contemporary phenomenon of the shackling of pregnant prisoners during childbirth and situate the
practice within the broader context of attempts to control the bodily integrity of incarcerated Black women. In Part II, I discuss
the historical antecedents of the contemporary practice of shackling pregnant women. I describe the ways in which racism was
expressed through the degradation and exploitation of Black women's reproductive capacities during slavery. I also highlight
the centrality of Black women in the use of the convict lease system and the chain gang, both of which emerged during the postCivil War era as a mechanism to maintain white racial dominance. 44 In Part III, I discuss the ways in which the racial blindness
of Eighth Amendment jurisprudence has rendered the ideological foundations of shackling practices invisible. To make this
point, I discuss Nelson v. Correctional Medical Services 45 and Brawley v. Washington, 46 two cases that have considered the
constitutionality of the shackling of pregnant prisoners. I also argue that shackling practices endure, despite formal prohibitions,
partly because of race blindness within doctrinal discourses. Lastly, in Part IV, I offer an antisubordination reading of the Eighth
Amendment. Such an approach requires reading the Eighth Amendment's “cruel and unusual punishments” clause in light of
the Thirteenth Amendment. Under the antisubordination approach, historical constructions and treatments of Black women
within the context of slavery, convict leasing, and chain gangs are essential to a determination that the shackling of pregnant
prisoners during childbirth is constitutionally and normatively infirm. My intent is to disrupt the normalization of practices that
have functioned to shackle not only the physical bodies of women in prisons, but central expressions of their humanity as well.

*1250 I.
Incarceration and the Shackling of FemalePrisoners During Pregnancy
“It is not fair to treat a person like this. I did a crime . . . but I'm not willing to be treated like a dog. I was treated like I wasn't
human.” 47

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Over the past thirty-five years, the prison system in the United States has grown at a dramatic rate, capturing an ever-increasing
segment of the population in its midst. 48 This growth, however, has largely been driven by the disproportionate criminalization
and incarceration of poor people of color, particularly from Black and Latino communities. 49 These outcomes are not mere
happenstance of an occasionally biased system of justice; rather, theorists have suggested that prisons have become a mechanism
for the regulation of racially and economically marginal populations. 50 Regulation of these populations has been accomplished
through a broad set of punitive social policies, including the “War on Drugs” and the “tough on crime” rhetoric that undergirds
contemporary drug laws, as well as the divestment from the social safety net. 51
Prison expansion has resulted in significant increases in the number of women incarcerated. As of 2009, more than 114,979
women were incarcerated in women's prisons across the country. 52 This represents a sharp increase from the 5600 women
who were incarcerated in 1970. 53 In addition to women held in prisons or jails, approximately 800,000 were on probation or
parole in 2010. 54 Roughly 33 percent of women under these various forms of criminal supervision are Black, 55 despite the
fact that Black women comprise roughly 7 *1251 percent of the overall population. 56 Indeed, Black women are eight times
more likely to be incarcerated than their white counterparts. 57 Between 1980 and 2003, drug-related arrests of Black women
increased by 888 percent, as compared to approximately 400 percent for white women. 58 All told, Black women represent the
fastest growing segment of the prison population. 59
As the number of incarcerated women has increased, so too has the rate of pregnancy and childbirth in jails and prisons. 60
Studies estimate that roughly 5 to 10 percent of all female prisoners are pregnant and that approximately 2000 children per year
are born to incarcerated mothers. 61 Within prisons, shackling is often standard operating procedure for the transport of women
in labor and is also used as a mechanism to control and demean them during childbirth. 62 Over the past decade, numerous
reports have documented this practice, finding that restraints are used without regard to flight risk or dangerousness. 63 The
contemporary practice of shackling in prisons results in the pervasive abuse of women's bodily integrity and reproductive
capacity. Although this practice may seem anachronistic to those outside of the prison context, on the inside, it is routine. 64

*1252 A. Control over the Exercise of Women's Reproductive Capacity in the Criminal Justice System
Constraints upon reproductive health and choices are a paradigmatic experience for incarcerated women. The constraints that
have come to be the hallmark of women's incarceration are part of a larger trend of reproductive subordination that has impacted
racially marginalized women within the carceral apparatus. Indeed, the reproductive capacities of Black women have historically
served as a primary site for punishment within the criminal justice system. The intersection of race and gender in the lives of
women of color, and Black women in particular, render them vulnerable to a host of ideological constructions-- including sexual
promiscuity and bad mothering--that portray them as lacking fundamental aspects of feminine gender identity. 65 Because of
these ascribed failings, women who have been criminalized or incarcerated are subject to the prevention of or punishment for
their choice to reproduce, often as a formal part of their sentences. In 1996, for example, women were given the “option” of
taking birth control in lieu of a lengthy sentence in a California state prison. 66 Other women have been criminalized for the
choice to become mothers while addicted to drugs. 67 Under recently proposed statutes in Georgia *1253 and Utah, some
women could be subject to prosecution for having miscarriages. 68 In these states, the specter of criminal prosecution is raised
to discipline women who have miscarriages that result from “reckless” behavior. In each instance, Black women have been
disproportionately impacted by these policies.

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Once incarcerated, women routinely endure the abuses and hardships of state-inflicted violence. Locked in cells behind the
high walls of prison, women generally, and Black women in particular, have little recourse against the onslaught of brutality
facing them when confined. Kim Buchanan has written persuasively about the pervasive violence Black women are subject to,
as well as the dignitary and privacy harms that accompany a formal prison sentence. 69 These harms reinforce and reproduce
the same constructions of Black women as aggressive, domineering, deviant, and sexually available. 70 In prison, punishments
are meted out through a number of mechanisms, including sexual abuse and sterilization. 71
The sexualized violence directed at female prisoners has been well documented. 72 Premised on notions of sexual deviance
and violability of prisoners, 73 female prisoners have been subjected to a range of sexual abuses, including vaginal, anal, and
oral rape; sexual assault; inappropriate touching during searches; and surveillance by male guards while in various states of
undress. 74 Male guards often use their positions of authority or outright physical force to coerce female prisoners into sex. 75
In a 1996 report, Human *1254 Rights Watch noted that women have very little recourse within prisons or in court to combat
these abuses. 76 Consequently, prison guards who assault women are rendered immune from accountability for the brutality
they inflict upon female prisoners. 77
While sexual abuse is premised on ideological constructions of Black women as inherently violable and sexually available,
another practice, sterilization, is premised on a historically related construct of incarcerated Black women: the “bad mother.” 78
Sterilization can be seen as an attempt to eliminate the biological threat presented by incarcerated women as well as a
representation of society's judgment that incarcerated Black women are unworthy heirs to the mantle of motherhood.
Women incarcerated in institutions are unable to adhere to white middle-class normative standards of “womanhood” and are
therefore deemed unfit to be mothers as a result of the intersection of their race, gender, class, and incarcerated status. In Poe
v. Lynchburg Training School and Hospital, for example, institutionalized women brought suit against the state of Virginia
for coercing women to undergo sterilization. 79 More recently, Justice Now, an Oakland-based civil rights organization that
advocates on behalf of female prisoners, has documented “a number of cases which suggest hysterectomies or oophorectomies
have been used as the first response to problems such as uterine fibroids or ovarian cysts, when far less invasive remedies were
available.” 80 The organization has also documented cases where women were pressured to consent to sterilization based on
a misdiagnosis or while sedated. 81
The reproductive and sexual violence female prisoners experience, however, does not abate because an incarcerated woman is
pregnant. Rather, particularized punishments of pregnant women have become standard practice in penal institutions across the
country. 82 For example, pregnant prisoners are *1255 often denied medical treatment during labor. 83 In one case, a mentally
ill African American woman was arrested for trespass in the state of Washington. 84 After being ignored by guards when she
told them she was in labor, she gave birth to her baby on the floor of her jail cell. 85 In another case, an African American
woman held in a York, Nebraska, jail was forced to give birth alone, over the toilet in her cell, and was assisted only after the
baby was born with the umbilical cord around its neck. 86 She was denied the ability to go to the hospital after she was accused
of “faking” labor pains. 87 Even when pregnant prisoners are provided medical assistance during labor and childbirth, it is often
at the expense of their dignity and basic humanity.

B. Shackling of Pregnant Women in Prison and the Attendant Psychological and Physical Harms

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As noted above, a significant number of female prisoners are pregnant at some point during periods of incarceration. Prison,
however, does not change the basic laws of nature. Like all women, pregnant prisoners experience significant pain and
discomfort during labor and childbirth. 88 As labor commences, pregnant women have difficulty walking because of the weight
of the baby, swollen feet, and the pain of contractions. 89 During active labor, women may experience “strong pressure in the
lower back and rectum, nausea, fatigue, tightness in the throat and chest area, shakiness, chills, or sweats.” 90
Despite the pain women experience while giving birth, many pregnant prisoners are subjected to some form of shackling
during labor or childbirth. Indeed, at least thirty-six states permit the practice. 91 A recent national study *1256 confirms the
widespread use of shackles on pregnant prisoners. 92 The study found that approximately a third of prisons that responded
use chains and handcuffs during prenatal visits or labor. 93 Several facilities reported that they cuff women's hands or ankles
during labor. 94 One prison indicated that it leaves handcuffs on during delivery, while four stated that they shackle women at
the ankle during delivery. 95 These studies demonstrate that the shackling of pregnant women is routine in women's prisons
across the country.
Instead of approaching the pregnancy and childbirth of incarcerated women with dignity and respect, the childbirth process
is often an occasion for particularized punishment, degradation, and humiliation. Prison officials frequently justify the use of
shackles on pregnant prisoners by citing concerns for the safety of correctional officers and the public. 96 Advocacy groups,
however, have demonstrated that shackles are used on all women, regardless of security threat, even when alternative security
mechanisms are available. For example, Amnesty International has found that women are shackled “regardless of whether they
have a history of violence (which only a minority have) and regardless of whether they have ever absconded or attempted to
escape (which few women have).” 97 In one instance described in the report, a hospital ward where incarcerated women gave
birth was locked and guarded by four armed men. Despite the presence of these guards, “every inmate [[was] chained by a
*1257 leg to her bed.” 98 Women are often handcuffed to bedrails even as they nurse or hold their children after they are
born. 99 Moreover, children are generally removed from women within twenty-four hours of giving birth. 100
The degradation represented by the use of shackles during pregnancy and childbirth inflicts significant psychological harm
on female prisoners. One pregnant woman incarcerated at a women's institution in Michigan, Kebby Warner, described the
shackling experience this way:
Every time I went for a “medical” run, I had to get a humiliating strip-search when I left and returned to
prison. Prisoners are placed in belly chains and our hands are cuffed for the duration of the visit unless
the doctor asks that they be removed. At about the sixth month of pregnancy, the strip-searches become
difficult. By this time, my emotional state was up and down, and most of the time I left the “strip room”
in tears from shame and humiliation. 101

In addition to the psychological harms associated with shackling, the practice also has profound physical consequences,
including restricting the ability of women to move into appropriate positions during childbirth. Indeed, shackling increases the
probability of falls because
[t]he pregnant uterus shifts a woman's center of gravity. Anything that throws her further off balance or makes walking more
difficult can increase her risk of falling. A fall in pregnancy is no small matter, as it can potentially harm the baby as well as
the mother, and in serious cases, can cause stillbirth. 102
Moreover, shackling can cause trauma to the mother and child, and can result in significant delays in treatment in the event of a
medical emergency. As one doctor reported, women and their children could face significant health risks should a complication

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arise during childbirth: “If there were a need for a [[cesarean] section, the mother [would] need[] to be moved to an operating
room immediately and a delay of even five minutes could result in permanent brain damage for the baby.” 103 Despite the
psychological and physical harms that result from the use of shackles on pregnant women, many prisons across the country
adhere to the practice.

*1258 The use of restraints on pregnant prisoners rests on an assumption that incarcerated women are dangerous as individuals
and as mothers. This presumption rests on stereotypes of female prisoners informed by prior regimes of racialized punishments
that viewed Black women as lacking in maternal instincts, driven by sexual desires, and physically threatening. 104 The
comments of one female prison guard reflect these stereotypes: “I'm a mother of two and I know what that impulse, that instinct,
that mothering instinct feels like. It just takes over, you would never put your kids in harm's way. . . . Women in here lack that.
Something in their nature is not right, you know?” 105 This comment emphasizes the contempt with which incarcerated mothers
are viewed. Female prisoners are cast as “bad mothers” by virtue of their incarceration. Thus, the use of shackles during labor
and childbirth can be understood as one way of punishing women for choosing to become mothers while incarcerated.

II.
Slavery, Reconstruction-Era Punishment, and Constructions of Black Womanhood
“I expect within two or three weeks to become a Mother and as it is a matter of life and death for me and my child . . . I . . .
ask you . . . as an act of common humanity to grant my pardon.” 106

The devaluation, degradation, and dehumanization of female prisoners represented by the use of shackles during labor and
childbirth does not occur in a vacuum. Rather, the women's prison system, and the punitive practices that occur within it, are
inextricably linked to the subjugation of Black women. The historical subordination of Black women in the context of slavery
and post-Civil War punishment systems has shaped their racial and gender identities and those identities in turn have shaped
punitive responses to social problems associated with Black women in the era of mass incarceration.
Over time, these racial and gender dynamics that attached to Black women became embedded within and now undergird the
contemporary operation of women's prisons. In this Part, I focus on Black women and describe the ways in which slavery
created racial and gendered subjects through the exploitation of Black women's physical labor and reproductive capacities. 107
Moreover, I examine the mechanisms by which the shackles of slavery and particular ideological constructions of Black women
endured well *1259 beyond its formal collapse in the Reconstruction-era punishment regimes of convict leasing and chain
gangs. 108 During this era, the use of punishment reinforced and reinscribed notions of Black feminine deviance that further
entrenched their subordinate status.
Indeed, the ideological constructs of Black women are rooted in and are essential to racial domination, specifically the “peculiar
institution” of slavery. 109 Slavery, convict leasing, and chain gangs operated in conflict with the broad ideals of freedom
and liberty espoused by the American polity. To reconcile this contradiction, Black identity was constructed separately from
white identity as sub- or nonhuman and thus justified a separate set of governing principles within the larger society. 110 This
differentiation and othering was, therefore, critical to the enterprise of maintaining racial dominance and white supremacy. 111
The process of othering, however, was both racialized and gendered.

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To the extent that Black women were dehumanized and distinguished from prevailing values of white womanhood, these
constructs of Black women specifically were imputed as confirmation of the inferiority of Blacks generally. 112 These notions
of inferiority were reinforced following the abolition of slavery as Southern legislators passes as series of statutes, known
as the Black Codes, designed to criminalized behavior disproportionately committed by former slaves. 113 As Black women
were incarcerated under these Black Codes, punishment signaled their degraded status, while the insulation from punishment
signaled the valorization of white women. 114 Black women's devaluation through punishment positioned them at the outer
limit of “womanhood,” reflecting the lack of value afforded to Black people.
In mapping the ideological constructions of Black women in the context of slavery, convict leasing, and chain gangs, I note four
characteristics that emerged during this period: (1) the masculinization of Black women, (2) the devaluation of Black women as
mothers, (3) the casting of Black women as dangerous, and (4) the construction of Black women as sexually deviant. While the
actual practice of shackling during labor and childbirth was not widespread during the pre- and post-Civil War eras, these four
characteristics that came to *1260 be during this period created the necessary conditions for the use of shackles during labor
and childbirth in the contemporary era of mass incarceration. Specifically, I contend that the constructs that initially attached to
Black women through an ideological edifice that justified enslavement and the racial domination through the use of the criminal
law became normalized within the punishment system over time. This is so because Black women were the primary subjects
of punishment during the formative years of the women's prison. Thus, in many respects, the modern women's prison was
built around specific perceptions of Black women. All female prisoners that are incarcerated in jails and prisons are, therefore,
impacted by this racialized legacy.

A. Racial and Gender Constructs of Black Women During Slavery and Post-Civil War Punishment Regimes
1. Masculinization
Slavery and the post-Civil War punishment systems were fundamental in shaping the racial and gender constructs that have
come to shape perceptions of Black women. Within these regimes, Black women were perceived as lacking in essential feminine
qualities. 115 Rather than being seen as “women,” Black women were cast to the opposite side of the gender binary. Such
perceptions are both racialized and gendered, and served to facilitate particular forms of subordination of Black women and
Black people generally. 116 Indeed, the masculinization of Black women within these systems of punishment, through the
stripping away of a feminine identity, allowed for the exploitation of Black women without the “protection” of womanhood
and justified pervasive physical and sexual abuse.
In the context of slavery, Black women's masculinization was a constitutive element of their enslavement and of their forced
labor under a regime that denied their personhood, instead viewing them as property. The *1261 exploitation of Black women
created a perverse equality of subordination with Black men given the stringent labor demands placed upon them as slaves. 117
Black women were forced to engage in all manner of hard labor, including backbreaking fieldwork and lease work in places like
coal mines and lumberyards. 118 The arduous work Black women were forced to perform functioned to negate their femininity,
placing them outside of dominant conceptions of Victorian womanhood. 119
During slavery arose the duality and contradiction represented by Black women's bodies: they were seen as departing from
prevailing ideals of “womanhood,” yet their uniquely feminine reproductive capacities were exploited as a means of expanding
the system of slavery. 120 As Black feminist scholar Leith Mullings notes, the “true woman” was seen as the paradigmatic wife
and mother. Her innate qualities included passivity, dependency, and submissiveness. She was viewed as delicate and frail. She

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was essentially good. 121 As Angela Y. Davis notes, “[j]udg[ing] by the evolving nineteenth-century ideology of femininity,
which emphasized women's roles as nurturing mothers and gentle companions and housekeepers for their husbands, Black
women were practically anomalies.” 122 In this regard, the exploitation of Black women's labor acted to masculinize them in
a society that viewed “womanhood” through a lens of domesticity. 123
Black women's work in the fields and in the homes of white slaveholders positioned them as the antithesis of “woman,” which
was defined by the private domain of the home and family. 124 Ideological constructs of Black women excluded them from
the protection of patriarchal constructs of femininity and justified their enslavement and the constant abuse to which they were
subjected. 125 The masculinization of Black women served to reconcile contradictory ideologies about women's capabilities
and the labor demands placed on Black women. 126
Following the abolition of slavery, Black women continued to be subject to an array of subordinating treatments and
punishments as a result of *1262 masculinization. Through the Black Codes, Southern states criminalized a range of conduct
thought to be committed by former slaves. 127 These crimes included vagrancy, absence from work, the possession of firearms,
insulting gestures or acts, job or familial neglect, reckless spending, and disorderly conduct. 128 Blacks were also prosecuted
for the failure to perform under employment contracts. 129
Individuals arrested under the newly expansive criminal law were punished through the use of convict leasing and chain gangs
and put to work in areas that were previously maintained by slave labor. 130 Under this regime, Blacks became the majority
in Southern prison camps, with their populations rising to as high as 90 percent. 131 As sociologist Loic Wacquant notes, “the
carceral system . . . functioned as an ancillary institution for caste preservation and labour control in America during [the] . . .
transition between regimes of racial domination, that [of] slavery and Jim Crow in the South.” 132 Crime and the penitentiary,
therefore, emerged as a new device for racial control. 133
Unlike white women, who were protected by their race and gender identities, Black women were subject to arrest,
criminalization, and incarceration. This regime often criminalized Black women for their failure to perform femininity in a
manner consistent with white Victorian standards of womanhood. 134 The states disciplined Black women's perceived gender
identities through convictions for behavior associated with masculinity, including public quarreling, using profane language,
and public drunkenness. 135 In one example, Black women in Mobile, Alabama, were sentenced to ten days at a workhouse
for engaging in a “war of words.” 136 White women, however, were not arrested for such minor offenses. Between 1908 and
1938, only four white women were ever sentenced to the chain gang in Georgia, compared with almost two thousand Black
women. 137
*1263 In this way, we can understand the punishment of Black women as performing as much a disciplinary function as an
economic one. The criminal law was organized around stereotypical depictions of Black women, 138 much in the same way that
the Black Codes fused notions of race and criminality with respect to Black men. 139 Indeed, gendered and racial constructions
of crime and criminality can be seen in the disproportionate policing of Black women and insulation from punishment for white
women in the Reconstruction era. 140
Once convicted, the arduous agricultural work required under the convict lease system and the coerced backbreaking labor on
railroads on chain gangs reinforced Black women's masculinization. 141 Black women were even forced to wear men's clothing

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when engaging in this demanding work. 142 In this regard, Black women were, as one prison administrator noted, “worked
without any discrimination with the male convicts.” 143 While Black women were masculinized as a result of the exploitation
of their labor and their subsequent incarceration in post-Civil war punishment regimes, they were subject to racialized gender
violence that could only be meted out as a result of their status as women. 144
2. Sexual Deviance
In the context of slavery, Black women were fundamentally valued as sources of both physical and reproductive labor. 145
Stated differently, Black women's bodies were not only utilized to generate profits as a result of labor, but were also used as a
means of increasing the slave population. 146 *1264 Consequently, the degradation and control of Black women's reproductive
capacities was central to the operation of the system of slavery. 147 To exploit Black women's reproductive capacities, their
bodies were treated as sexually violable commodities. 148 Indeed, neither the laws nor the customs that valorized the chastity
of white womanhood protected Black women. 149 Instead of being constructed as the victims of sexual violence, the endemic
violence that Black women experienced was justified by their construction as sexually aggressive, promiscuous, and deviant. 150
For example, in 1662 Virginia passed a statute that upended centuries of English law, which provided for patrilineal heritage,
and instead provided that children born to Black women inherited the status of the mother. 151 At the same time, the law placed
Black women outside of the coverage of statutes that prohibited rape. 152 These statutes thus allowed for the rape of Black
women with impunity and for any resulting pregnancy to benefit the perpetrator of the rape, namely white slave masters, as any
child born to an enslaved Black woman would become a slave as well.
These policies doubly victimized Black women, first through sexual violence and second through the enslavement of their
children. Notwithstanding this victimization, public discourse did not present Black women in a sympathetic light. Rather, these
and other policies were justified by and reinforced prevailing ideas about Black women's uncontrolled sexual aggression and
lasciviousness. 153 Taken together, the Virginia statute and the *1265 uncognizability of the rape of Black women established
a regime in which Black women's vulnerability to sexual assault was sanctioned, if not encouraged, by law.
After the formal abolition of slavery, the criminalization of Black women reinforced stereotypes of Black women's sexual
deviance and moral depravity. In the years following the Civil War, Southern states singled out Black women for prostitution
or illegal solicitation offenses. Over a twelve-month period in 1881, in the state of Tennessee, for example, only 136 white
women were arrested for solicitation compared to 731 Black women. 154 In Atlanta, women represented 1715 of the 7236
Blacks arrested in 1890, with many of these arrests likely for prostitution offenses. 155 As Darlene Clark Hine has observed,
“[c]learly, the actions of law enforcement officials reflected a shared belief in the stereotype that depicted all black women as
natural prostitutes.” 156 For crimes of prostitution, Black women were sent away to hard labor.
Within these labor camps, guards and other white administrators often targeted and sexually abused Black women. 157 Indeed,
Black female prisoners, cast as sexually deviant and therefore subject to sexual violation, experienced profound abuse and
intense surveillance by male guards. 158 Unlike Black men or white women, they were uniquely subject to sexual violence and
abuse at the hands of guards as rape was endemic. 159 Such assaults largely went unprosecuted and at times resulted in the
pregnancy of Black female prisoners. 160 White women, however, were rarely, if ever, charged with prostitution offenses or

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sent to such institutions. 161 In the rare instances in which white women were punished, they often received special treatment,
better conditions, and earlier releases. 162
*1266 The dichotomy between the denigration of Black women on the one hand and the valorization of white women on
the other formed the basis for state-sponsored or state-sanctioned violence, including lynching, rape, and segregation. This
dichotomy fueled the creation of racialized boundaries to prevent interactions between Black men and white women. At the
same time, Black women were largely unprotected from sexual or physical violence at the hands of white men. In this regard,
notions of white femininity and sexual chastity played an important role in maintaining white racial power at a time when
Reconstruction threatened white racial dominance.
3. Maternal Devaluation
The construction of Black women as sexually deviant operated in tandem with their devaluation as mothers. 163 This devaluation
was most clearly expressed through the lack of care provided to enslaved women during pregnancy. Pregnant Black women
were routinely forced to engage in demanding domestic tasks and fieldwork, often up until the delivery of their children. 164
Women could be beaten if they did not work fast enough, regardless of the physical limitations they might have experienced
as a result of their pregnancies. 165
While Black women's identities as mothers were not valued, their children were highly valued as property. Indeed, in a perverse
physical representation of this contradiction, pregnant women were whipped in such a manner so as to protect the fetus while
at the same time disciplining women as workers. 166 As one overseer observed, a “woman who gives offense in the field, and
is large in a family way, is compelled to lie down over a hole made to receive her corpulency, and is flogged with the whip or
beat with a paddle, which has holes in it; at every stroke comes a blister.” 167
*1267 The devaluation of Black women as mothers was further inscribed given that women were often immediately separated
from their children due to the demands of slave labor. 168 Black women were sent back to the fields shortly after childbirth,
where they were worked from sunup to sundown. In this context, women had no choice but to leave their children in the care of
other women who were no longer able to work or to take their newborns into the field with them. 169 In either case, the ability
to bond with their children was limited by the work demands placed upon them. Moreover, Black women had no legal claim
to their children and therefore could not prevent them from being sold away for any reason or no reason at all. 170
Additionally, attempts to resist sexual exploitation and domination contributed to the characterization of Black women as
bad mothers. According to historian Darlene Clark Hine, Black women who were raped by their masters often turned to
abortions as a means of resisting the institution of slavery and sexual exploitation. 171 These Black women often refused to
bear children who were conceived in acts of violence or to raise their children in a state of bondage. 172 The white slaveholding
class, however, interpreted this resistance as evidence of Black women's degenerate status as mothers. According to Hine, one
Southern physician suggested that all doctors in Hancock County, Georgia, were “aware of the frequent complaints of planters
about the unnatural tendency in the African female population to destroy her offspring.” 173 These prevailing notions of Black
women as failing to possess maternal instincts not only reinforced their stereotypes as bad mothers, but also separated them
from fundamental aspects of the social constructions of “womanhood.” 174
The social construct of Black women as bad mothers evolved to become a constitutive element in Black women's incarceration
in post-Civil War punishment systems. Indeed, pregnancy provided little protection from the harsh punitive environment to

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which Black women were often subjected. Rather, Black women were often treated harshly, sent to chain gangs, and ordered
to perform hard labor despite being pregnant. 175 Unlike the slavery context, convict leasing operators had no vested interest
in the children of *1268 Black women given that they would not inherit their mother's status as a formal matter. 176 Instead,
women's pregnancies were often seen as reflections of the bad moral character of Black women; therefore, states extended no
mitigation of penalty during sentencing. 177 Moreover, once imprisoned, pregnancy was seen as a hindrance to the state's ability
to extract labor from Black women and was therefore punished. 178 The punitive posture toward Black women's pregnancies
at sentencing and during incarceration served to devalue Black women as mothers and center their reproductive capacities as
a cause for racial subordination.
Several stories bear this point out. In 1881, Richmond County, Georgia, sent at least five pregnant Black women to the chain
gang. 179 In testimony before an 1881 investigatory committee on prison conditions in Georgia, one Black woman at the camp
testified that her baby was born prematurely as a result of overwork. 180 Another Black woman was raped by a prison official,
subsequently became pregnant, and was punished as a result of the pregnancy. After she delivered the baby, “guards separated
[her] from the newborn and placed the mother in the dungeon, but not before subjecting her to [[a] public head shaving.” 181 As
Anne Butler notes in Gendered Justice in the American West, “[f]orced work situations and inappropriate birthing conditions,
both highlighted by the absence of gender dignity, gave male overseers yet another form of violence to make a woman's prison
time distinctive.” 182
Like their pregnancies, Black women's roles as mothers and caretakers were devalued. Prisons denied female prisoners the
ability to parent or even keep in contact with their children given the remote locations of the prisons. 183 States routinely rejected
petitions by Black women who sought clemency as a result of their duties and obligations as mothers. 184 Instead, the number
of children a Black woman had provided a basis for assuming moral deviance and thus the need for harsher penalties. 185
4. Dangerousness
As a consequence of Black women's perceived failure to conform to dominant constructs of femininity, sexual chastity,
and motherhood, they were often cast as dangerous to the prevailing racialized and patriarchal social *1269 norms. They
were described in popular discourse as hyperaggressive, embodying characteristics of “dishonesty, tardiness, drunkenness,
immorality, and irresponsibility.” 186 Accounts that highlighted the dangerousness of Black women served to further justify
the subordination of Black women specifically and Black people more generally.
For example, in one instance, a leader of the Missouri Press Association wrote a letter to an international antislavery group
in England, “declaring that ‘the Negroes of this country are wholly devoid of morality’ and that ‘the women were prostitutes
and all were natural thieves and liars.”’ 187 In another case, one Mississippi Delta resident remarked to a local newspaper that
Black women
exhibit a ferocity as bloody and as savage as that exhibited by the men. They stab with deadly effect and shoot with unerring
precision. They plunge ice picks into the hearts of men and women, cut throats with razors, batter heads with axes, and shoot
their victims full of holes with pistols. 188
These anecdotes demonstrate the ways in which ideological stereotypes of Black women pervaded public discourse, not only
reinforcing their marginality within broader society, but also equating their gendered racial identity with criminality and
dangerousness.

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B. The Second Reconstruction, Black Women, and the “New” Carceral Regime
In the late 1920s, the use of prisons as a means of racial control reached its nadir. Prisons were largely displaced as a
mechanism of social control by laws mandating or allowing segregation. Nevertheless, negative social constructs of Black
women persisted and justified discriminatory treatment of African Americans under the guise of Jim Crow. 189 Under this
new regime, jurisdictions across the United States excluded African Americans from participation in social, political, and
economic life. Anti-Black violence was widespread. During this era, Black women were kept in subservient positions in a
variety of contexts and were often subject to rape and other forms of sexual *1270 violence. 190 Governments refused to
intervene in private customs and practices that prevented African Americans from accessing public accommodations, housing,
and employment. 191 Together, these public and private arrangements constituted the system of Jim Crow and operated as a
comprehensive system of racial control.
As Jim Crow and segregation became more entrenched, the use of the criminal law to regulate racialized populations was
drastically curtailed. 192 Indeed, between 1929 and 1967, the rate of incarceration in the United States did not exceed 100
prisoners per 100,000 people in the general population, 193 and the incarceration of women was virtually nonexistent. Since
the late 1960s, however, incarceration rates have spiked and the expansive use of incarceration has come to resemble prior
regimes of racial control. 194
Several theorists have suggested that the dramatic increase in use of the criminal law and incarceration came in response to the
gains of the Civil Rights Movement. 195 In the mid-1950s through the late 1960s, the Civil Rights campaign to dismantle Jim
Crow and formal segregation reached its high watermark. In what has been called the “Second Reconstruction,” 196 activists
and lawyers deployed organizing and legal strategies that succeeded in dismantling formal discrimination and the doctrine of
“separate but equal” in critical respects. In response to the opening of American society and the anxiety it generated among
whites, politicians proposed “law and order” as a means of ensuring the stability of the social, political, and economic order.
The language of “law and order” was racialized, drawing on ideological constructs of Black men and women as deviant and
dangerous. 197 Under the auspices of the “law and order” political framework, states criminalized more conduct and stiffened
penalties--with racially disparate results.
Southern states, in many ways, led or heavily influenced the “law and order” rhetoric and the “tough on crime” policies
and prison practices that followed. 198 Racialized constructs of criminality that were solidified during earlier regimes of
punishment informed the public's perspective on social problems such as poverty, joblessness, and addiction. As the punitive
demands of the public extended into prison practices, harsh conditions of confinement *1271 within prisons in “Sunbelt states”
influenced legislators and prison administrators. 199 Moreover, restrictions upon individuals marked by a criminal conviction
proliferated, in many ways resembling felon disenfranchisement laws enacted in Southern states after Reconstruction. 200 Taken
together, these threads of Southern influence on national punishment policies served as anchors of the modern regime of mass
incarceration. Given the role of Black women in shaping Southern punitive practices, ideological constructions of Black women
and particular practices inflicted upon them in the South can also be seen as informing the operation of women's prisons across
the country.
Following the “Second Reconstruction,” the number of individuals incarcerated in state and federal institutions increased
significantly. 201 Crack cocaine and other drug offenses drove much of the increase in the prison population. Constructs of
Black men and women, which were refined in early regimes of punishment, influenced the public's perception of drug users

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and sellers. 202 Earlier ideological constructions of Black women as criminal, morally bankrupt, and sexually deviant translated
into public stereotypes of “crackheads” and “crack mothers.” 203 These constructs animated the heavy police surveillance of
poor communities as well as the disproportionate arrests of Black men and women suspected of drug possession and related
offenses. 204 Draconian sentencing disparities for crack cocaine assured that individuals convicted of crimes involving crack
(who were largely Black) were treated more harshly than individuals convicted of cocaine offenses (who were largely white)
through the imposition of lengthier sentences. 205
Driven by the War on Drugs, approximately 1.5 million people were in prison by the mid-2000s, nearly half of whom were
Black. 206 In Southern states, including those which employed convict leasing and chain gangs only a few decades earlier,
“[n]early half of all the nation's state-level prisoners were *1272 held in institutions of 11 high-growth Sunbelt states in
2000 . . . .” 207 This figure includes nearly half of all incarcerated women. 208 During this period, the number of prisons
constructed in the United States reached a historic high. 209
Black women led the trend toward increasing incarceration rates for women, totaling approximately 32 percent of all female
prisoners. 210 The disproportionate representation of Black women in prison relates to the negative normative constructs of them
as masculine and sexually deviant. Indeed, anthropologist Diane Lewis suggests that punishment is used as much to discipline
women for violating gender roles as for violating the criminal law. 211 Because Black women have historically been perceived
as masculine, Lewis suggests that Black women are disproportionately represented in prisons and jails because society views
them as gender deviant and thus in greater need of discipline. 212
This observation is supported by the positive relationship between Black women's representation in contemporary prisons and
the harsh turn in prison practices. Indeed, the state's willingness to rehabilitate prisoners decreased at roughly the same time
as the number of incarcerated Black women increased. 213 Instead, the conditions within women's prisons declined drastically,
perhaps related to historical constructs of Black women as both more dangerous and more masculine. 214 Black women, as the
stereotypical female prisoner in the public mind, did not engender public attention or sympathy. 215
*1273 Thus, states driven by the public's need for a punitive response to racialized social problems, engaged in a “race to the
bottom” of sorts. In what Craig Haney calls the “devolving standards of decency,” prisons reduced educational and therapeutic
programming and increased punitive measures such as solitary confinement. 216 Some states instituted supermaximum prisons
and others reinstituted the chain gang. 217 In this race to the bottom, the same Southern states that perfected punitive regimes
such as chain gangs were on the vanguard of the retributivist trend. States in the “Sunbelt” touted their harsh and lowcost conditions of confinement. 218 As Mona Lynch notes, “[w]ithin these ‘no frills' prisons, policies and procedures are
implemented that aim to punish more deeply than the sentence of imprisonment itself.” 219
As the system of punishment developed and extended its reach in the era of mass incarceration, ideas that were once attached
only to Black women's bodies, such as dangerousness, deviance, and control of bodily integrity, have come to shape overall
institutional functioning in contemporary women's prisons. 220 Indeed, many of the racial and gender constructs associated
with Black women are employed to justify the shackling of pregnant prisoners during labor and childbirth. Explicitly, shackling
is rationalized by highlighting the dangerousness of female prisoners or the risk that they will use their pregnancy as an excuse
to escape. Implicit within the justifications for shackling is an assumption that incarcerated women are bad mothers, such that
they would feign labor pains or put their children at risk in order to escape from custody. In many respects, these explicit and

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implicit justifications for the shackling of all women mirror the constructs used to subordinate Black women in earlier regimes
of racial domination.
Much like the social welfare context, where the punitive posture taken toward Black women as the imagined primary beneficiary
impacts all who are subsidy reliant, 221 prison is a gendered and racialized institution informed by *1274 societal constructs of
and hostilities toward Black women. Non-Black women are effectively “Blackened” by virtue of their incarceration. Therefore,
they are also harmed by the racialized practices, such as shackling during labor and childbirth, that occur within women's prisons
and jails. In this regard, as Patricia Hill Collins asserts, “controlling images of Black womanhood also functioned to mask social
relations that affected all women.” 222 Thus, when practices such as the shackling of pregnant prisoners during childbirth are
framed in these terms, Black women's identities are silently but heavily influencing women's prisons more broadly.

III.
The Invisibility of Race and Gender Within Eighth Amendment Doctrinal Discourses
The Eighth Amendment provides that no “cruel and unusual punishments [shall be] inflicted” upon any person. 223 However,
current Eighth Amendment doctrine is insufficient to address the racial and gender dynamics that lead to the use of shackles on
pregnant prisoners. In particular, the Eighth Amendment doctrine's emphasis on the individual intent of prison officials obscures
fundamental racial and gender dynamics that influence practices such as shackling. Indeed, as legal scholar Sharon Dolovich has
noted, the standard for measuring whether conditions of confinement are constitutionally adequate “is premised on a narrow,
individualistic conception of punishment that is wholly unsuited for the Eighth Amendment context.” 224 Because the standard
is individualized and therefore fails to consider the historical implications of race and gender in creating shackling practices,
it is unable to consider the broader institutional context out of which individual acts of brutality emerge. Consequently, the
deeply embedded ideological moorings and social meanings of practices that are outgrowths of slavery, such as shackling, will
not be fundamentally uprooted, contested, or eliminated.
Indeed, the Eighth Amendment's profound inability to uproot racism in the administration of justice has deep implications
and extends beyond the question of conditions of confinement. In McCleskey v. Kemp, the Court considered a challenge to a
Georgia state statute on the grounds that it was administered in a racially discriminatory manner in violation of the Eighth and
Fourteenth Amendments. 225 Specifically, McCleskey alleged that the death penalty was being discriminatorily and arbitrarily
applied as evidenced by gross racial disparities in its application. 226
*1275 McClesky presented the Baldus study, the most comprehensive study of its kind suggesting that racial disparities existed
at all levels of administration of the death penalty. Indeed, the study demonstrated that prosecutors were more than three times
more likely to seek the death penalty when a Black defendant was accused of killing a white victim than when a white defendant
killed a Black victim. 227 The study further demonstrated that defendants who were convicted of killing whites were 4.3 times
more likely to be sentenced to death than when convicted of killing Blacks and that Black defendants were more likely to
receive the death penalty regardless of their victim's racial identity. 228 Taken together, the Court noted that “the Baldus study
indicates that black defendants . . . who kill white victims have the greatest likelihood of receiving the death penalty.” 229
The Court, however, rejected McCleskey's arguments and found the operation of Georgia's statute constitutionally permissible.
Relying on Furman v. Georgia, the Court noted that any penalty irrationally applied is presumptively invalid under the Eighth
Amendment. 230 It stated, however, that the guided use of jury discretion was sufficient to defeat claims of arbitrariness and
thus upheld Georgia's statute. 231 In reaching this conclusion, the Court decontexualized McCleskey's claim by failing to

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engage the ways in which the criminal justice system generally and the death penalty in particular had historically been used
to maintain racial power. Instead, the Court suggested that some degree of racial bias is inherent in the system of discretion
and that to delegitimize the exercise of such discretion would challenge the entire criminal justice system. 232 In the absence of
direct evidence of racial discrimination in a particular case, the Court held that a showing of “likelihood” or “risk” that racial
discrimination factored into a decision to impose the death penalty was insufficient to make out an Eighth Amendment claim. 233
The narrow, intent-based inquiry of the Eighth Amendment preserves what scholars have called the “penology of racial
innocence.” 234 The penology of racial innocence refers to legal and academic approaches to the examination of crime and
punishment, such as that of McCleskey, that presume “criminal justice is innocent of racial power until proven otherwise.” 235
As I discuss *1276 below, the intent-based posture of contemporary Eighth Amendment jurisprudence ignores the racialized
and gendered structures of penal institutions and instead focuses on discrete instances of brutality that occur within such
institutions, while ignoring the institutional culture that gives rise to the brutality. In the context of shackling, the history of
racialized punishment and constructs of Black women as dangerous, maternally deviant, and masculine informs the harsh
posture taken toward pregnant women prisoners. Eighth Amendment jurisprudence, therefore, does little to unearth the
functioning of racial imagery and power as expressed by and through prison practices such as shackling. Consequently, Eighth
Amendment jurisprudence lends itself more to temporary individual relief while the racialized ideologies that animate practices
within women's prison continue undisturbed.

A. The Current Constitutional Standard for Evaluating Conditions of Confinement Claims Under the Eighth
Amendment
Incarceration, by definition, removes individuals from the autonomy of their private lives and places them at the mercy of
the state for the purposes of punishment. 236 Incarcerated individuals, therefore, are completely reliant on the state to meet
their basic needs. In the absence of the fulfillment of those needs, illness, pain, or even death can result. Consequently, the
Supreme Court has held that the Eighth Amendment “imposes duties on [prison officials] who must provide humane conditions
of confinement; prison officials must ensure that inmates receive adequate food, clothing, shelter and medical care and must
take ‘reasonable measures to guarantee the safety of inmates.”’ 237
In Estelle v. Gamble, the Court noted that the constitutional duties imposed by the Eighth Amendment embody “‘broad and
idealistic concepts of dignity, civilized standards, humanity, and decency’ against which we must evaluate penal measures.” 238
The Court went on to emphasize that “the evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society” inform
the Eighth Amendment. 239 In applying this standard, the Estelle line of cases has held that the Eighth Amendment's reach
extends to conditions of confinement, rather than simply to judicial and legislative sentencing determinations. 240
While articulating a robust and progressive vision of the Eighth Amendment, the Estelle Court nevertheless described a test for
Eighth *1277 Amendment conditions of confinement challenges that was largely ambiguous and therefore subject to narrow
readings. 241 In considering an allegation of the deprivation of medical care, the Estelle Court held that a party must show “acts
or omissions sufficiently harmful to evidence deliberate indifference to serious medical needs” in order to state a cognizable
claim under the Eighth Amendment. 242 The Court, however, did not describe what “deliberate indifference” meant or how
it was to be applied in the conditions of confinement context; thus, the language's meaning faced vigorous contestation in
subsequent opinions.

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In Wilson v. Seiter, the Court opted for a narrow reading of the cruel and unusual punishments clause and limited the scope of
the “deliberate indifference” test articulated in Estelle. 243 In Wilson, the Court held that a prisoner's pain and suffering, without
more, does not fall within the protection of the Eighth Amendment. 244 Instead, the Court held that for conditions to constitute
“punishment” and thus violate the Eighth Amendment, there must be an “inquiry into a prison official's state of mind.” 245 This
inquiry is necessary because the Court read the word “punishment” to mean “a deliberate act intended to chastise or deter.” 246
Thus, the Court held that “[i]f the pain inflicted is not formally meted out as punishment by the statute or the sentencing
judge, some mental element must be attributed to the inflicting officer before it can qualify.” 247 As a consequence of Wilson,
subsequent case law read “deliberate indifference” to include a scienter requirement, although Wilson left the precise contours
of such indifference undefined.
In Farmer v. Brennan, the Court further explained the state of mind showing necessary to establish “deliberate indifference”
under the intent regime announced in Wilson. 248 To state a cognizable claim of injury under the Eighth Amendment, the Court
established a two-pronged test for deliberate indifference that contained both objective and subjective elements. First, “the
deprivation must be, objectively, sufficiently serious.” 249 In other words, “[a] party must show that [s]he is incarcerated under
conditions posing a serious risk of harm.” 250
*1278 Second, the Court read a subjective intent requirement into the “deliberate indifference” standard similar to a modified
recklessness standard. 251 To establish the subjective prong of the deliberate indifference standard, the Court held that a prison
“official must both be aware of the facts from which the inference can be drawn that a substantial risk of harm exists, and he must
also draw the inference.” 252 In sketching the contours of the subjective prong of the Eighth Amendment, the Court noted that
“the failure to alleviate a significant risk that an official should have perceived but did not, while no cause for commendation,
cannot be condemned as the infliction of punishment under the Court's cases.” 253
The intent-based inquiry that animates the Court's Eighth Amendment jurisprudence in the context of conditions of confinement
is problematic for several reasons. First, the text of the Eighth Amendment does not call for a demonstration of intentionality.
Second, the intent-based standard in conditions of confinement cases incentivizes guards and prison officials to ignore threats
of harm to prisoners. Third, the Estelle-Farmer test adopts a perpetrator perspective that is overly deferential to prison
administrators. Fourth, the test largely insulates high-ranking policy makers from liability given its focus on individual intent.
Fifth, the individualistic, intent-based standard elides any consideration of the historical, gendered, or racialized context out of
which prison practices arise. I will discuss each of these issues in turn.
While the Court has determined that conditions of confinement are outside of the scope of “punishment,” unless officials
intend harm or are deliberately indifferent, the language of the Eighth Amendment does not solely prohibit cruel and unusual
punishment that is intentionally inflicted. In interpreting the Eighth Amendment, conditions of confinement can just as plausibly
be understood as part of the sentence of incarceration that statutes govern and a judge applies. Prisons, and the conditions or
practices that take place therein, are essential elements of incarceration as a means of punishment. Justice White made this point
in a concurring opinion in Wilson: “[in] our prior decisions that have involved challenges to conditions of confinement, . . .
we have made it clear that the conditions are themselves part of the punishment, even though not specifically ‘meted out’ by a
statute or judge.” 254 Indeed, during sentences of incarceration, prisoners are separated from the outside world, placed in cells,
restrained by various mechanisms, and supervised at all times by correctional staff. Their access to food, medical care, and safety
depends on policy choices and practices within prisons. These are not merely incidental or “collateral *1279 consequences”
to the punishment meted out by the statute or a judge, but rather central aspects of such punishment. Nevertheless, the
conditions that constitute a sentence of imprisonment are currently placed outside of the Court's narrow, intent-based definition

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of punishment. Consequently, “‘serious deprivations of basic human needs,’ [often] go unredressed due to an unnecessary and
meaningless search for ‘deliberate indifference.”’ 255
Moreover, the Estelle-Farmer test provides an incentive for guards and other prison employees to ignore information that might
lead them to “know” about potential threats to the safety of incarcerated persons. Given that the Court has insulated prison
officials from liability when they fail to perceive a risk of harm, there is no reason for guards to be proactive in anticipating
risks to the health and safety of prisoners, nor to be attentive to the particular needs of subpopulations of prisoners. Instead,
this standard provides a disincentive for prison administrators to ensure adequate record keeping regarding issues that degrade
conditions of confinement, such as reports of assault or the use of restraints on prisoners who are pregnant. Because of the
disincentives toward knowledge of dangerous conditions within prisons, the constitutional standard in conditions of confinement
cases is often more protective of prison staff than prisoners.
In addition, the Court's intent-based view of punishment does not consider the perspective of those who are the protected class
(i.e., incarcerated individuals), but rather that of the perpetrators of violence or neglect within prisons. 256 From the perspective
of the imprisoned, inhumane treatment or conditions of confinement are no less punitive because a guard or official did not
intend it to be as such. As Justice Blackmun noted in his concurring opinion in Farmer, a prisoner may experience punishment
when she suffers “‘severe, rough, or disastrous treatment,’ regardless of whether a state actor intended the cruel treatment to
chastise or deter.” 257 This broader view of punishment, however, does not animate the Court's interpretation of the applicability
of the Eighth Amendment in conditions of confinement cases.
The Estelle-Farmer standard also makes it difficult to establish liability against policy makers given the subjective knowledge
prong of the Farmer inquiry. The subjective knowledge prong focuses on the individual intent of prison officials rather than on
the structural dynamics that lead to the deprivation of life's necessities. Such a standard for punishment evinces little *1280
regard for the administrative context in which guards make decisions or the institutional culture of prisons that allows degrading
conditions to flourish. As Justice White has noted, “[i]nhumane prison conditions often are the result of cumulative actions and
inactions by numerous officials inside and outside a prison, sometimes over a long period of time.” 258 Yet, the cumulative
actions are disaggregated and the doctrinal inquiry focused on the intent of individuals who have the least ability to transform
conditions. Consequently, the layers of bureaucracy that exist at various stages of policy implementation often insulate highranking policy makers from liability.
Lastly, the prevailing “deliberate indifference” standard ignores the structural dynamics that enable harsh punitive environments
to flourish and overlooks the way in which challenged practices function as mechanisms of racial dominance. As noted in Part II,
individual conduct occurs within institutional cultures, where prevailing norms and attitudes shape behaviors and perceptions.
Yet the Eighth Amendment's individualized focus negates any consideration of the racialized institutional culture out of which
particular practices emerge.
Additionally, even if a court deems a particular instance of a practice unconstitutional, the resolution is often incident specific
and generally does little to disrupt the ideological constructs that animated the use or existence of a practice in the first place.
The result is a consequence of the fundamental mismatch between the structural dynamics that give rise to the abuse of women
in prisons and the doctrinal tools for recognizing and remedying this harm. On the one hand, as Katherine Beckett notes, “racial
power [is] systemic, institutional, and long-standing; it is premised on ideologies and institutions that preserve white advantage,
and it perpetuates ongoing patterns of undeserved enrichment and unjust impoverishment.” 259 On the other hand, doctrinal
tools are unable to address racial subordination in prisons unless there is intent to discriminate, perhaps as supported by evidence
of racial disproportionality. 260 Yet when racial power is embedded within the prison as an institution, is organized around
racialized constructs of female prisoners, and results in pervasive dehumanization and disregard for prisoners, this form of

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racial subordination is not cognizable. Instead, the Constitution permits only the examination of discrete physical harms that
individual officers inflict. This approach, however, will fail in the long run because it addresses the symptoms, not the causes
of abuse. Prison as a racially disciplinary apparatus, therefore, continues to function unabated.

*1281 B. Doctrinal Elision of Race and Gender in Eighth Amendment Challenges to the Shackling of Pregnant
Prisoners
The Court's doctrinal framework for evaluating conditions of confinement under the Eighth Amendment elides the ways in
which race and gender are deeply implicated in challenged practices. Nelson v. Correctional Medical Services, the first federal
court of appeals case to consider the use of shackles on pregnant prisoners, is a primary example of this phenomenon. In
Nelson, a Black woman brought an Eighth Amendment challenge against a private medical service provider as well as other
institutional defendants. 261 The plaintiff, Shawanna Nelson, was convicted of passing bad checks and credit card fraud. 262
She was six months pregnant when she was brought to the Arkansas prison. When Nelson went into labor, she was transported
to a hospital facility outside of the prison. 263 Nelson's pain was so severe that she could hardly walk. Nevertheless, in addition
to being assigned an armed escort, she was placed in handcuffs and her ankles were secured by leg restraints during transport
to the hospital. 264 Once admitted to the hospital, Nelson's ankles were shackled to her hospital bed. 265 According to Nelson,
“the shackles prevented her from moving her legs, stretching, or changing positions.” 266 She delivered her baby without any
anesthetics and sustained significant injury. 267
In considering Nelson's Eighth Amendment claim, a three-judge panel of the Eighth Circuit found that the conduct of prison
officials did not offend constitutional standards. 268 The panel opinion began by noting that “deliberate indifference to serious
medical needs of prisoners constitutes the ‘unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain,’ [which is] proscribed by the Eighth
Amendment.” 269 Nevertheless, the panel concluded that the prison officials were not deliberately indifferent to Nelson's needs
because they took her to the hospital when she complained of pains and removed her shackles before delivery. 270
Moreover, the panel deemed the actions of the prison officials to be without any intent to punish Nelson and justifiable given
the penological interests at stake. In particular the panel noted
[the shackling policy] serves the legitimate penological goal of preventing inmates . . . from escaping . . . less secure confines, and
is *1282 not excessive given that goal. A single armed guard often cannot prevent a determined, unrestrained, and sometimes
aggressive inmate from escaping without resort to force. It is eminently reasonable to prevent escape attempts at the outset by
restraining hospitalized inmates to their beds . . . . 271
Here, the panel frames women who are routinely subject to the shackling policy as “aggressive” and “dangerous,” thus
reinscribing racial and gendered constructions of women who are imprisoned. The women, like their historical counterparts in
the convict leasing and chain gang systems, are stereotyped as masculine, cunning, and dangerous, rather than as women who
are deeply vulnerable due to labor and childbirth.

While it may be argued that the panel was simply trying to anticipate incarcerated individuals in the noncustodial setting who
might be less vulnerable (and not just pregnant prisoners during labor or childbirth), the opinion's language was not quite so
nuanced. It did not suggest an individualized determination of a prisoner's dangerousness based on, for example, her offense,
security classification, history of violence, or previous attempts at absconding. Instead of rooting out stereotypical constructions
of female prisoners that often render them vulnerable to various forms of state violence, the panel's decision legitimized these

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images as the basis for continued brutality. The panel's determination and its corresponding rationale, however, would not stand
long since the Eighth Circuit granted Nelson's petition for en banc review.
In a closely divided 6-5 opinion, the full Eighth Circuit ruled that the use of shackles during childbirth violated Nelson's Eighth
Amendment rights. 272 Specifically, the court found that Nelson's pregnancy was a serious medical need and that the guard
ignored the obvious risks to her serious medical need through the application of shackles during and after labor. 273 The court,
however, reached this conclusion only with respect to the individual officer that placed the restraints on Nelson. The court
found that the director of the prison was not liable and therefore dismissed Nelson's claims against him. 274 Nor did the court
engage in any attempt to disrupt the stereotyping of female prisoners that animated the original panel opinion or the dissenting
opinion of five members of the en banc court.
Following the decision reversing the panel's determination with respect to the individual officer, the court sent the case back
for a jury trial, which resulted in a verdict awarding Nelson compensatory damages in the amount of *1283 one dollar. 275
While we cannot know what motivated the jury's valuation of damages in this case, it is certainly plausible that the ideological
constructions of female prisoners generally and Black women in particular as bad mothers who are deviant, dangerous, and
sexually promiscuous, impacted how the jury viewed the physical and dignitary harms Nelson suffered as a result of being
placed in shackles during childbirth. 276
In a case following Nelson, a district court in Washington State considered an Eighth Amendment challenge to the shackling
of a pregnant prisoner. In Brawley v. Washington, a prisoner housed at the Washington State Corrections Center for Women
brought suit against officials for violation of her Eighth Amendment rights after she was shackled during prenatal care and
childbirth. 277 When she went into labor and was to be transported to the hospital, she was first strip searched and placed in full
restraints, including waist restraints. 278 After being admitted to the hospital, officers “chained her to the bed in the birthing
room.” 279 The chains prevented Brawley from engaging in a full range of motion. 280 Complications during the childbirth
required Brawley to undergo a cesarean delivery. 281 While the shackles were removed during the procedure, they were replaced
“right after the surgery, before she could even feel her legs.” 282 Shackles prevented her from assisting her newborn child
when he appeared to be in distress and from walking around as part of her recovery from surgery as recommended by the
hospital nursing staff. 283 In reviewing Brawley's claims, the district court concluded that there was *1284 sufficient evidence
of deliberate indifference such that the officer was not entitled to qualified immunity. 284
Many feminist advocacy groups have lauded decisions like Nelson as significant victories for incarcerated women and the
cause of reproductive rights in prison. 285 These decisions, however, are just as important for what they do not say as for the
favorable decisions rendered. In particular, the decisions reveal a number of elisions that obscure the broader racial and gender
dynamics that undergird the practice of shackling incarcerated pregnant women and therefore undermine attempts at broader
structural reform.
The first elision represented in these opinions is the focus on individual actors rather than institutions. In Nelson, for example,
the court rejected liability for prison administrators. Despite the fact that there was a policy governing the use of restraints
on prisoners in noncustodial settings, discretion was left to guards with no requirement that they be directed by medical
professionals in the use of restraints, and no training on how to treat pregnant prisoners during labor and childbirth. 286 The
court rejected liability for these actors because the administrators did not specifically “know” that shackles were being applied
to the plaintiffs in each case.

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Second, the rationale of each case rendered invisible the structural role of racial subordination as well as racial and gender
constructs in informing contemporary penal practices such as shackling during childbirth. As noted above, the justifications
for shackling during labor and childbirth are bound up with constructs of Black women, and therefore all female prisoners,
as masculine and dangerous. Rather than thoroughly interrogating the justificatory rationales or the ideological constructs that
undergird such rationales, the Nelson and Brawley courts required the prisoner to disprove that she fit within the ideological
construct in order to obtain relief. To the extent that the racialized constructs of female prisoners are unexamined, racial power
can continue to operate in women's prisons. Meanwhile, the women's prison persists in the degrading treatment of all who are
incarcerated.
Third, the current doctrinal framework embodied by Nelson and Brawley does not capture the dignitary harms caused by the
use of shackles on pregnant prisoners. 287 Assuming there was no physical injury resulting from the use of *1285 shackles,
it would likely be difficult for a plaintiff to raise an Eighth Amendment “deliberate indifference” claim. 288 In the context
of shackling during labor and childbirth, however, the harms are much broader than the physical. Shackling harms women's
sense of bodily integrity, dignity, and self-worth; it is psychologically scarring. 289 Moreover, given the historical devaluation
of Black women and their reproductive capacities within punitive institutions, shackling sends broader social messages of
inferiority and deviance. Despite the deep implication of these harms to female prisoners, they are largely irrelevant to the
question of deliberate indifference. Consequently, to the extent that these decisions addressed individual injury, they failed to
recognize and address the larger structural issues that animate the practice of shackling pregnant prisoners or the broader set of
harms that correspond to the use of shackles during labor and childbirth.

C. Persistence of Shackling Practices
The consequences of the collective elisions in contemporary conditions of confinement jurisprudence, as represented by Nelson
and Brawley, are significant. Given the obscured role of race and gender in Eighth Amendment jurisprudence, it is unsurprising
that practices such as the shackling of female prisoners persist, often despite guidelines to the contrary. Indeed, while the Nelson
lawsuit was pending, the Arkansas Department of Corrections, a defendant in the case, continued to justify its shackling policy
to the public by appealing to the idea that incarcerated women can be dangerous. 290 One department spokesperson remarked,
“Though these are pregnant women, they are still convicted felons, and sometimes violent in nature.” 291 This framing of
pregnant women invites us to explore the racial identity we imagine when terms such as “felons” and “violence” are mentioned in
the context of prisons. I contend that stereotypical depictions of Black women continue to proliferate and provide the ideological
content in depictions of and statements regarding female prisoners. In this way, the history of Black women's enslavement,
economic exploitation of their reproductive capacities, and harsh punishment of them in the post-Civil War South looms large.
The ideological constructions of the deviant, hostile, and violent female prisoner undermine efforts to prohibit shackling in
states that currently authorize the practice. Arkansas, for example, rejected antishackling legislation *1286 notwithstanding
the Nelson decision. 292 Soon thereafter, a Virginia bill that proposed limitations on the use of shackles on incarcerated pregnant
women was defeated in committee. During a committee hearing on the bill, one legislator remarked that pregnant prisoners are
threats and should be shackled as a matter of course. 293 The member contended that incarcerated women in labor should be
unshackled only in exceptional circumstances. 294
Even in states that allow the practice only in circumstances involving danger to others or flight risks, stereotypical constructions
of female prisoners as “dangerous” have operated to become exceptions that render the rule ineffective. In California, state
law formally provides that “at no time shall a woman who is in labor be shackled by the wrists, ankles, or both including
during transport to a hospital, during delivery, and while in recovery after giving birth . . . .” 295 There are exceptions, however,

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that permit shackling in cases where they are “deemed necessary for the safety and security of the inmate, the staff and the
public.” 296 Because of the exceptions built into the statute, the legislature's intent has gone unenforced in critical respects.
Advocates continue to note noncompliance by county jails regarding the use of shackles during labor. 297 Prisons narrowly
construe or ignore the law, while county jails argue they are exempt from coverage. 298 The continued use of the practice
prompted advocates to return to the legislature for an additional bill that would ban the practice outright. Former California
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, however, vetoed the bill. 299
Similar dynamics operate in other states. In New York, for example, the state legislature has prohibited the use of restraints on
women in labor unless they have a history of violence or have attempted to escape. 300 Nevertheless, Amnesty International
found that guards routinely ignore the law. Women with neither a history of violence nor a record of escape attempts are still
shackled. 301 This is particularly true in Illinois, the first state to pass a statute *1287 banning the practice, where there have
been more than twenty lawsuits filed against the Cook County Sherriff's Department alleging that women were shackled during
labor and childbirth despite a state statute prohibiting the practice. 302 Officials contend that the practice continues because they
are authorized to shackle women up until labor and they are often unaware when labor has commenced. 303 Given the ways
in which stereotypes of female prisoners have informed prison practices, it is likely that prison officials have internalized such
imagery at a conscious or subconscious level and thus approach pregnant prisoners as threats rather than as human beings. 304
Because such stereotypes of Black women have been largely uncontested in case law or scholarly engagements, this practice will
likely endure despite formal prohibitions or limitations on the use of shackles on pregnant prisoners during labor and delivery.

IV.
Unshackling the Pregnant Body: The Liberatory Potential of
Reading the Eighth Amendment in Light of the Thirteenth
“In every human Breast, God has implanted a Principle, which we call love of Freedom; it is impatient of Oppression, and
pants for Deliverance.” 305

As previously mentioned, the current doctrinal framework governing conditions of confinement claims brought under the Eighth
Amendment is insufficient to address the structural, racial, and gender dynamics that animate the practice of shackling pregnant
prisoners. Instead, the existing framework is more amenable to combating individual, rather than institutional, behaviors. 306
*1288 In the absence of a doctrinal space that regulates institutional subordination and challenges the ideological foundations
upon which such institutional subordination rests, degrading practices such as the shackling of pregnant prisoners during labor
and childbirth will persist.
In this Part, I provide an institutional intervention through the application of an antisubordination approach to the Eighth
Amendment and definitions of “cruel and unusual punishments.” This approach rejects subjective factors and instead utilizes
objective factors, such as other constitutional provisions, to define “cruel and unusual punishments” and to give meaning
to notions of evolving standards of decency that animate the Eighth Amendment. Relying on the Thirteenth Amendment, I
outline a reading of the Eighth Amendment that is race and gender conscious and argue that this alternative would provide the
intersectional, historical, and structural framework necessary to root out not only individual expressions of degrading treatment,
but also institutional expressions of racial domination. In this antisubordination approach to the Eighth Amendment, historical
constructions of Black women during slavery and in the post-Civil War era are central to understanding whether institutional
practices, such as the shackling of pregnant prisoners during labor and childbirth, constitute cruel and unusual punishment.

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In this regard, the Thirteenth Amendment provides the normative force in defining what it means for conditions of confinement
to be “cruel.” 307 As I discuss below, cases interpreting the scope of the Amendment suggest that it is concerned with contesting
racial subordination by opposing public and private *1289 actions that rely on negative racial and gender constructs that
emerged out of a history of racial subjugation and that may reasonably be conceived of as badges or incidents of slavery.
Moreover, these cases describe the Thirteenth Amendment as seeking to combat practices that express racially invidious
social messages or symbolic meanings regarding subordinated groups. Importantly, these cases support the application of the
Thirteenth Amendment to limit the scope of punishment within the criminal justice system. Under the approach I outline below,
these principles stand as objective factors by which to define cruelty and measure our evolving standards of decency that
give content and meaning to the Eighth Amendment and prohibit conditions of confinement that maintain or reinforce racial
subordination. Applying this standard, I conclude that given the historical continuities and social meanings associated with the
practice, the shackling of pregnant prisoners during childbirth runs afoul of the Eighth Amendment.
Some might suggest that the likelihood of a court adopting this approach is extremely low or that the Supreme Court's conditions
of confinement jurisprudence is too deferential for a more structural and race-conscious standard to take root. The Court's recent
decisions, however, may suggest otherwise. In Brown v. Plata, 308 for example, the Court rejected a deferential approach in the
face of pervasive constitutional violations regarding medical care in California state prisons. 309 The Court upheld an order by a
three-judge panel requiring the reduction of the state prison population by approximately 40,000 people, the largest population
reduction ever ordered. 310 Perhaps the pervasive and abysmal conditions within American prisons have reached a juridical
tipping point regarding the willingness of courts to allow administrators extraordinary latitude in the name of “security.” 311
This does not necessarily mean that the Court's willingness to engage in institutional prison reform will extend to a raceconscious examination of such prison practices. Indeed, over the course of the past thirty years, the Court has embarked on
a project of constitutionalizing colorblindness and dismantling race-conscious doctrines and remedies. 312 While it does not
appear that the current membership of the Court is inclined to dramatically shift course, later courts or lower courts could
be receptive to the antisubordination approach to *1290 the Eighth Amendment proposed here. Indeed, judges might be
inclined to adopt a test for “cruel and unusual punishments” that is informed by the Thirteenth Amendment precisely because
the Thirteenth Amendment can serve as a vehicle for racial equity in ways that have been foreclosed by the Supreme Court's
Fourteenth Amendment jurisprudence. In some ways, the antisubordination approach I outline below is “an appeal . . . to the
intelligence of a future day, when a later decision may possibly correct the error[s]” made by courts regarding critical issues
of race, crime, and punishment. 313
Moreover, while the antisubordination approach to understanding punishment practices is decidedly oriented to doctrinal
reform, it is equally relevant to legislative and advocacy discourses. Specifically, this approach is relevant at the legislative and
executive branches inasmuch as they have the right and obligation to enforce constitutional provisions. 314 In many respects,
legislatures have more flexibility in their ability to enact policies that are attentive to the racial and gender stereotypes that may
motivate punitive public policies or prison regulations and to establish more robust oversight over the operation of prisons. 315
The members of the legislative and executive branches can institute antishackling policies or promulgate regulations that are
broad and unequivocal in their protection of female prisoners during labor and childbirth and that limit official discretion given
the racial and gender constructs that underlie harsh shackling practices.
By embracing a framework for contesting shackling practices that reveals the ways in which race and gender are implicated
in ostensibly race-neutral prison practices, advocacy groups can leverage the moral authority of antisubordination with
respect to mass incarceration. Advocates can utilize this approach to challenge basic assumptions about incarcerated women

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and the impact of incarceration on racialized communities. Importantly, this approach keeps the question of contemporary
manifestations of slavery and racial inequality present in the prevailing postracial discourse. Moreover, the utilization of this
approach, which interrogates race and gender constructs, can link feminist advocacy communities centered on reproductive
rights with antiracist communities focused on resistance to racialized mass incarceration. The coalitional possibilities under
an antisubordination reading of the Eighth Amendment will allow advocates to expand their base and to increase their ability
to demand reform within legislative bodies. Such a coalitional approach will allow the antishackling movement to be more
powerful not only in the *1291 court of law but also in the court of public opinion. As Angela Davis once noted, “[i]f we are
already persuaded that racism should not be allowed to define the planet's future and if we can successfully argue that prisons
are racist institutions,” then perhaps we would be more willing to heavily inquire regarding the operation of race at the structural
level and to ultimately reduce our reliance on incarceration as a solution to social ills. 316

A. An Antisubordination Reading of the Eighth Amendment
Under the antisubordination approach, the Eighth Amendment's “cruel and unusual punishments” clause should be read
objectively, broadly, and in light of the historical aims of the Thirteenth Amendment. By antisubordination, I mean a
constitutional orientation that “views social patterns and institutions that perpetuate the inferior status of Blacks as the primary
threats to equality.” 317 Through this lens, the antisubordination approach's doctrinal framework is particularly attentive to
the ways in which conditions of confinement are premised upon or facilitate the continuation of racial domination within the
context of prisons. Moreover, the antisubordination approach seeks to disrupt state actions or omissions that preserve material
and symbolic racial subordination through particular forms of punishment. 318
1. Conditions of Confinement as Punishment
Rejecting the Eighth Amendment's preoccupation with intent, the antisubordination approach focuses on institutional patterns
and practices that facilitate racial subordination. Under this approach, all conditions of confinement would be deemed
“punishment” for the purpose of the doctrinal inquiry, regardless of the state of mind of the institutional actor.
By contrast, the contemporary Eighth Amendment “deliberate indifference” standard conceives of punishment in narrow terms,
focuses on the intent of individual governmental actors, and provides broad deference to prison officials. The deliberate
indifference standard raises a defendant-friendly presumption that a particular practice or course of action does not constitute
“punishment” and places the burden on the prisoner to show otherwise. This burden also makes it difficult to hold institutional
actors accountable for policies or practices that occur within penal institutions. As noted in the preceding Part, however, the
text of the Eighth Amendment need not be read in such a limited fashion.
In cases that followed Estelle, the Court applied a more expansive, objective test to determine whether conditions of confinement
constituted cruel *1292 and unusual punishment. For example, in Rhodes v. Chapman, 319 the Court considered a challenge
to overcrowding at a state correctional facility. The plaintiff alleged that the practice of double celling and overcrowding
at an Ohio prison violated the Eighth Amendment. In analyzing the challenge, the Court made it clear that the conditions
were punishment for the purposes of Eighth Amendment scrutiny. 320 The Court noted that conditions of confinement were
cognizable as punishment under the Eighth Amendment because they can result in the “unquestioned and serious deprivation
of basic human needs.” 321 The Court observed that conditions of confinement, such as the denial of medical treatment, can
rise to the level of cruel and unusual punishment based on the level of seriousness. 322

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Similarly, in the context of an antisubordination reading of the Eighth Amendment, an objective, rather than subjective, measure
of conditions of confinement would govern determinations of punishment. Under such an objective test for punishment,
conditions of confinement, such as the shackling of pregnant prisoners, would constitute punishment imposed by the state. The
notion that conditions of confinement are indeed punishment rests on the fact that prisoners would not be in a position to be
injured or harmed but for the confinement imposed by the state. As Sharon Dolovich has noted in arguing for a broad and
objective reading of the punishments clause, “when convicted offenders are sentenced to time in prison, living in prison for
that time under existing conditions is the punishment.” 323
This objective test is more protective of prisoners, institutionally rather than individually oriented, and grounded in the lived
experiences of the subject of incarceration. Indeed, by shifting the focus from individual actors to institutional conditions,
some of the most problematic aspects of the current doctrine would be eliminated. For example, this objective measure of
“punishment” allows for macrolevel reform of institutions, rather than the rebuke of individual actors that operate within
particular structural contexts. 324 Recall that under current doctrine, high-ranking officials can plead actual ignorance to avoid
liability. Under the antisubordination reading, however, *1293 high-ranking officials could not escape liability merely by
pleading ignorance of conditions for which they are responsible for maintaining as a result of their failure to act. 325 An objective
approach allows for increased opportunity to hold high-ranking institutional actors accountable for policies and practices that
occur within prisons, and also allows for increased institutional reform. By shifting to this objective test, the core of the Eighth
Amendment inquiry will consist of determining which punishments are impermissibly “cruel.” 326
2. Objective Measures of Contemporary Values, the Thirteenth Amendment, and the Shackling of Pregnant Prisoners
In answering this question regarding what constitutes cruelty, the antisubordination approach to the Eighth Amendment
draws upon the evolving standards of decency, which undergird Eighth Amendment jurisprudence. In Trop v. Dulles, 327 the
Court considered whether the denationalization of a wartime deserter was “cruel and unusual punishment.” In articulating the
parameters of the “cruel and unusual punishments” clause, the Court noted that “[t]he basic concept underlying the Eighth
Amendment is nothing less than the dignity of man.” 328 In Rhodes, the Court noted that no “static ‘test’ can exist by which
courts determine whether conditions of confinement are cruel and unusual, for the Eighth Amendment ‘must draw its meaning
from the evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society.”’ 329
While the Court has articulated that broad and progressive ideals of decency and dignity underlie the Eighth Amendment, it
has not provided a concrete definition of those terms. Rather, the Court has noted that these terms and the Eighth Amendment
are “not fastened to the obsolete, but may acquire meaning as public opinion becomes enlightened by a humane justice.” 330
Moreover, in defining decency and dignity that guide evaluations of cruelty, the Court has said that “‘the Constitution
contemplates that in the end [a court's] own judgment will be brought to bear on the question of the acceptability’ of a given
punishment.” 331 But such “‘judgment[s] should be informed by objective factors to the maximum possible extent.”’ 332 When
considering whether the *1294 death penalty violated contemporary values, “the Court looked for ‘objective indicia’ derived
from history, the action of state legislatures, and the sentencing by juries.” 333 In measuring evolving standards of decency, the
antisubordination approach similarly looks to “objective indicia” of contemporary values to evaluate the cruelty of a particular
practice. 334
I suggest expanding these objective indicia to include other constitutional provisions, particularly the Thirteenth Amendment,
to help inform the meaning of evolving standards of decency and “cruel and unusual punishments.” 335 The symbolic value
of the Thirteenth Amendment is relevant given overlapping principles of both the Eighth and Thirteenth Amendments. Indeed,

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both are grounded in broad notions of personhood and human dignity. 336 As the Court noted recently in Brown v. Plata, under
the Eighth Amendment, “[p]risoners retain the essence of human dignity inherent in all persons.” 337
Moreover, members of the Court have hinted at the fundamentally anticaste, antisubordination orientation of this proposed
reading of the Eighth Amendment. This is particularly the case in the Court's death penalty jurisprudence. For example, in
Furman v. Georgia, the Court considered a challenge to the administration of the death penalty in light of racially disparate
results and concluded that the punishment was arbitrarily and irrationally applied in violation of the Eighth Amendment. 338
This conclusion was infused by antidiscrimination principles articulated by a number of Justices in separate opinions. For
example, Justice Douglas contended, “there is no permissible ‘caste’ aspect of law enforcement.” 339 He went on to suggest
that “equal protection of the laws . . . is implicit in the ban on ‘cruel and unusual’ punishments.” 340
*1295 In the years that followed Furman, and despite the reinstitution of the death penalty in Gregg v. Georgia, several Justices
continued to expound on the antisubordination values of the Eighth Amendment. In McCleskey v. Kemp, the Court reviewed
a challenge to a Georgia state statute that alleged it was being administered in a racially discriminatory manner in violation of
the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. In emphasizing that the death penalty was unconstitutional given the racial disparities
revealed during the course of the litigation, Justice Brennan noted in his dissenting opinion that “there was a significant chance
that race would play a prominent role in determining if [the petitioner] lived or died.” 341
In evaluating McCleskey's claims of arbitrariness in the application of the death penalty in Georgia, Justice Brennan considered
“Georgia's legacy of a race-conscious criminal justice system.” 342 Justice Brennan noted Georgia's history of a “dual system” of
punishment that emerged out of slavery: slave codes and laws subjecting Black men to the death penalty for raping white women
while white men who raped Black women went largely unpunished. 343 The dual system was furthered by prevailing ideologies
of white dominance and the inferior status of Blacks. 344 Based on the evidence of disparity, Justice Brennan contended that
the dual system was “still effectively in place.” 345 He noted that the racial disparities revealed by the case demonstrate “the
subtle and persistent influence of the past.” 346 He concluded, however, by noting that “we remain imprisoned by the past as
long as we deny its influence in the present.” 347
The antisubordination reading of the Eighth Amendment takes Justice Douglas's interpretation of cruel and unusual
punishments, Justice Brennan's admonishment that we must be attentive to the ways in which the past shapes the present, and
utilizes the Reconstruction Amendments, namely the Thirteenth, to give the Eighth Amendment content and meaning. Thus,
the examination of evolving standards of decency, and by extension the meaning of cruelty, would be informed by values
represented by the Thirteenth Amendment and the Framers' intent to eliminate slavery and its badges and incidents.
a. The Thirteenth Amendment as a Symbol of Contemporary Values
In defining the parameters of the evolving standards of decency that undergird the Eighth Amendment's cruel and unusual
punishments clause, the *1296 antisubordination approach looks to the historical record generally and the history of the
Reconstruction Amendments in particular. The Thirteenth Amendment and the circumstances surrounding its passage provide
critical insight. While the Thirteenth Amendment may be used as an independent vehicle for challenging conditions of
confinement, 348 I argue that it can also be used to measure societal values with respect to prison practices that are anathema
to contemporary standards of decency.

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As part of a trio of post-Civil War Reconstruction Amendments, the Thirteenth Amendment was designed to abolish slavery and
elevate the status of former slaves by combating the badges or incidents of slavery. 349 In other words, the Framers intended not
only to abolish slavery as a formal matter, but also to extinguish all of the permutations of racial domination that were derived
from slavery. 350 In keeping with this sentiment, Senator Henry Wilson, a proponent of the Thirteenth Amendment, argued:
If this Amendment shall be [enacted], it will obliterate the last lingering vestiges of the slave system . . . all
it was and is, everything connected with or pertaining to it. . . . Then the sacred rights of human nature, the
hallowed family relations of husband and wife, parent and child will be protected by the guardian spirit of
that law which makes sacred alike the proud homes and lowly cabins of freedom. 351
During congressional debates, another supporter of the Thirteenth Amendment, Senator James Harlan, included interference
with parental and marital relationships as the types of badges or incidents of slavery that the Thirteenth *1297 Amendment
should be deployed against. 352 Harlan's comments reflect the concerns of the Reconstruction Congress with the family and
reproductive liberty of former slaves. 353 These legislative debates provide some central insights regarding bodily autonomy
and integrity that can shed light on the meaning and symbolic value of the Thirteenth Amendment today. 354 Indeed, they
demonstrate that Congress understood that reproductive subordination and exploitation were constitutive elements of slavery
and that racialized policies that touch on reproductive capacity could constitute badges or incidents of slavery. 355

These legislative debates and the concern with the badges and incidents of slavery are in line with the Supreme Court's
interpretations of the Thirteenth Amendment. In the Slaughter-House Cases, for example, the Supreme Court noted that
the Thirteenth Amendment was a “grand yet simple declaration of the personal freedom of all the human race within the
jurisdiction.” 356 In the Civil Rights Cases, the Court reaffirmed this observation, noting that the Thirteenth Amendment allowed
Congress the authority to engage in actions “necessary and proper . . . for the obliteration and prevention of slavery with all
its badges and incidents.” 357
Despite acknowledgement of the broad goals of the Thirteenth Amendment, the Court's early application of the provisions of
the Amendment were very narrow in the Slaughter-House Cases, 358 the Civil Rights Cases, 359 and Plessy v. Ferguson. 360
These interpretations, along with the Thirteenth Amendment's Exception Clause permitting involuntary servitude as a condition
of punishment, 361 combined to enable recalcitrant Southern legislatures to circumvent the aims of Reconstruction through the
imposition of Black Codes; *1298 the authorization of private discrimination; and the institution of formal racial barriers in
social, economic, and political life. 362 For example, in Plessy v. Ferguson, where the Supreme Court considered a challenge
under the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments to a statute mandating segregated rail cars in Louisiana, the Court rejected
Plessy's claims, finding that segregation did not implicate rights protected by the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments.
Relying on the Slaughter-House Cases and the Civil Rights Cases, the Court held that segregation was “merely a legal
distinction” which did not constitute involuntary servitude, nor did it impose a badge or incident of slavery prohibited by the
Thirteenth Amendment. 363
The Supreme Court's cramped reading of the scope of the Thirteenth Amendment was not, however, without vigorous
opposition. Indeed, Justice Harlan dissented from the majority opinions in the Civil Rights Cases and Plessy v. Ferguson. In his
Civil Rights Cases dissent, Justice Harlan argued that the majority's construction of the Thirteenth Amendment was “narrow
and artificial.” 364 He further asserted that the construction went against the “substance and spirit” of the Amendment. 365 In
his famous dissent in Plessy, Justice Harlan vociferously contested the majority's anemic reading of the Thirteenth Amendment.
Contrary to the majority, Justice Harlan argued that the Thirteenth Amendment prohibited segregation, which he saw as

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constituting a system of domination that was rooted in slavery. 366 In particular, he asserted that “[i]t not only struck down the
institution of slavery as previously existing in the United States, but it prevents the imposition of any burdens or disabilities
that constitute badges of slavery or servitude. It decreed universal civil freedom in this country.” 367 In this way, not only did
Justice Harlan suggest that the Thirteenth Amendment had significant force in prohibiting the racial subordination that was the
legacy of slavery, he also asserted that the Court had a role in enforcing its provisions.
In the wake of these debates regarding its scope, the Thirteenth Amendment maintained some vibrancy. In Bailey v.
Alabama, 368 for example, the Court invalidated a statute that required an individual to be punished for failing to perform under
a labor contract in which some funds were paid in *1299 advance. 369 In considering Congress's authority under Section 2
of the Thirteenth Amendment, the Court noted some limits on legislative authority to use crime as a means of reinstituting a
system of slavery. The Court noted that, “[t]he plain intention was to abolish slavery of whatever name and form and all its
badges and incidents; to render impossible any state of bondage . . . .” 370
In reaching this conclusion, the Court was not concerned with the racially disparate impact of the criminal statute or the
discriminatory intent of the legislature in passing the measure. Instead, the Bailey Court noted that in reversing the conviction
they did so “[w]ithout imputing any actual motive to oppress.” 371 The Court was also not concerned with the racial identity
of the target of the punishment; rather, it was concerned with the statute's relationship to slavery and racial oppression. 372
Bailey, therefore, stands for the proposition that the Thirteenth Amendment contests entrenched patterns, practices, and policies
that are rooted in slavery and that facilitate subordination, regardless of whether the complainant is a descendant of slaves and
regardless of the intent of policy makers. Through this holding, the Court revived the Thirteenth Amendment from its moribund
status and deployed it to undermine one of the most pernicious mechanisms of racial subordination in operation in the South
during that era.
More recently, the Court has read congressional authority to enforce the provisions of the Thirteenth Amendment more broadly
in order to combat racial domination. In Jones v. Alfred H. Mayer Co., the Court upheld the use of a statute to prohibit private
housing discrimination pursuant to Congress's Thirteenth Amendment authority. 373 The Court's decision in Jones reaffirmed
that the scope of the Amendment extended beyond a mere prohibition of slavery. Rather, the Court held that the Thirteenth
Amendment “authorizes Congress not only to outlaw all forms of slavery and involuntary servitude but also to eradicate the last
vestiges and incidents of a society half slave and half free.” 374 These “vestiges” and “incidents” need not have existed during
slavery, *1300 they could be extensions of society explicitly organized around racial exclusion, exploitation, and hierarchy.
Moreover, Jones reflects a concern with not only the material consequences of the badges or incidents of slavery, but with
invidious symbolic messages as well. 375
Taken together, I argue that the history of the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment, Justice Harlan's articulation of the
Thirteenth Amendment as a vehicle to combat the badges and incidents of slavery in his dissent in Plessy, the Bailey Court's
focus on the structural facilitation of subordination rather than racially invidious intent, and the recent use of the Thirteenth
Amendment to repudiate the racially invidious social meanings inherent in the context of housing discrimination in Jones
demonstrate that the Thirteenth Amendment stands for more than just the elimination of slavery. It stands as a symbol of our
society's commitment to substantive racial equity and the human dignity of all persons, and is oriented against the placement
of burdens or benefits that facilitate the establishment or maintenance of a racial caste. 376
Applying these insights in the context of the Eighth Amendment can assist in the creation of a test for cruelty that is steeped
in antisubordination values. First, to the extent that a practice constitutes a badge or incident of slavery, or relies on normative
racial and gender constructs that are outgrowths of slavery, that practice should be deemed cruel and unusual punishment for

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purposes of the Eighth Amendment. To interpret the meaning of “badges and incidents of slavery,” we can draw from the
definition offered by Judge Wisdom in his dissenting opinion in Williams v. City of New Orleans. Judge Wisdom suggested
that when a practice can be “linked with a discriminatory practice against blacks as a race under the slavery system, the present
effect may be eradicated under the auspices of the Thirteenth Amendment.” 377 Stated *1301 differently, when considering an
Eighth Amendment challenge under the antisubordination approach, a court should endeavor to ascertain whether the contested
practice is related to slavery and the post-Civil War systems of subordination. Courts should also consider whether a practice
relies on the normative constructs derived from slavery, whether it reproduces particular historical mechanisms of subordination,
and whether the practice reinforces racialized notions of inferiority rooted in slavery.
The use of the Thirteenth Amendment as a measure of our commitment to evolving standards of decency not only renders
the history of slavery and the ideological constructs that emerged out of that history cognizable, it also captures the dignitary
harms that arise from practices such as shackling. It recognizes that the choice to become a mother is “central to personal
dignity and autonomy.” 378 With respect to shackling, an antisubordination understanding renders cognizable the injury to the
dignitary interest of reproductive autonomy while capturing the relationship between this injury and slavery. To the extent that
the contemporary use of shackles on pregnant prisoners relies on negative constructs of Black women as masculine, sexually
deviant, or as lacking in maternal instincts, the use of shackles during pregnancy does violence to the dignitary interests of
female prisoners.
The loss or deprivation of this dignity represents a legitimate interest that can be remedied by an antisubordination orientation
of the Eighth Amendment. Such a robust reading of the scope of the Eighth and Thirteenth Amendments would enable Eighth
Amendment remedies even in cases where no physical injury is present. Indeed, as Judge Reinhardt noted in his dissenting
opinion in Campbell v. Wood, a case challenging the administration of the death penalty via hanging, “[a]lthough indignity
may stem from the needless infliction of pain, it can also arise from the relatively painless infliction of degradation, savagery,
and brutality. Cruelty does not necessarily involve pain.” 379
Moreover, the antisubordination approach to the Eighth Amendment is not only concerned with material consequences of the
badges or incidents of slavery, but also with the invidious social meaning that can be drawn from challenged penal practices
that reinforce or reinscribe racial subordination. 380 As Charles Lawrence has noted, governments may “convey[] a symbolic
message to which the culture attaches racial significance.” 381 Indeed, particular conditions of confinement can cause physical
as well as dignitary harms to *1302 individuals, but the scope of the injury is much broader than the harm experienced by the
individual subject to the practice. They can send social messages of inferiority about racialized groups of people. Such messages
may constitute a badge or incident of slavery 382 and thus be deemed cruel when read through the lens of the Eighth Amendment.
b. Standing to Bring Antisubordination Claim
Individuals of any racial background should be able to bring claims under the antisubordination reading of the Eighth
Amendment. However, in weighing claims brought under that reading, the racial identity of the claimant is relevant when
assessing whether a particular practice has some resonance with slavery or constitutes a badge or incident of slavery. Indeed,
the primary evil the Thirteenth Amendment sought to address was African slavery. 383 Consequently, its normative orientation
is attentive to the ways in which racial subordination functioned in the context of slavery and its contemporary salience in
shaping punitive policies. In the context of the women's prison, the ways in which slavery and successive racial regimes shape
modern practices is necessarily bound up in ideologies, constructs, and histories related to Black women. As I noted in Part II,
the ideological constructs of Black women as lacking in maternal qualities, sexually deviant, masculine, and dangerous have
shaped and become embedded within the modern women's prisons. 384 Indeed, Black women are the paradigmatic prisoners
and the paradigmatic victims of harsh punitive practices, such as shackling, precisely because the carceral system around which

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punishment is organized is premised on historical constructs and representations of Black women. These constructs and the
practices derived from them function to subordinate Black women both inside and outside of prison.
For example, while there is no data on the racial distribution of shackling practices, civil rights and prisoners' rights organizations
have found that Black women were more likely to be subject to sterilization practices and more likely to be sanctioned
through practices such as solitary confinement. 385 To the extent that Black women are the primary class of litigants under
the antisubordination approach, they can challenge policies and practices at the institutional level and therefore produce broad
structural reform that will improve conditions for all women. This is so not only because a challenged policy such as shackling
could be deemed normatively and constitutionally infirm, but also because of the work the doctrinal standard can do to *1303
deconstruct and contest negative stereotypes of Black women that give rise to harsh practices that in turn affect all women.
Yet, because non-Black women are also incarcerated in spaces that are shaped by these racialized norms derived from
slavery and the post-Civil War period, they too are subject to injuries arising from the harsh punitive practices that flourish
within prisons. 386 As Camille Rich notes in the context of employment discrimination, nonminorities may be vulnerable to
discriminatory treatment in the workplace as a result of minority targeted, yet facially neutral, policies that have discriminatory
purposes or effects. 387 In the context of employment discrimination, Rich highlights what she calls the “economic injury cases”
where “a marginal white alleges that pay, benefits, or other privileges associated with her position are being allocated according
to facially colorblind procedures intended to disadvantage minorities.” 388 To substantiate the existence of such facially neutral,
yet discriminatory policies, Rich notes that “[e]conomists have shown that employers tend to decrease wages for certain jobs
when they appear to be dominated by minorities, and whites who are employed in these positions experience the same drop in
wage levels.” 389 In this way, certain areas of employment have been racialized, and consequently, all individuals who access
such work are adversely impacted.
Similarly, in the context of women's penal institutions, the category that incarcerated non-Black women occupy, that of the
prisoner, is highly racialized. The women's prison was built around assumptions regarding and constructs of Black women who
have been criminalized at disproportionate rates both historically and contemporarily. Consequently, such racialized imagery
and ideology structures the treatment of incarcerated Black and non-Black women alike. All incarcerated women are thus
subject to racialized forms of discrimination. Non-Black women, like Black women, are denied routine medical care and are
subject to pervasive sexual abuse. Further, like Black women, non-Black women have been the victims of shackling practices
in jurisdictions across the country. To the extent that non-Black women make claims under the antisubordination theory of the
Eighth Amendment, they too must demonstrate the relationship between slavery, the racial subordination of Black women, and
a particular practice. In sum, they must demonstrate that a practice constitutes a badge or incident of slavery. The availability
of this antisubordination vehicle to non-Black women could open up possibilities for broader antiracist coalitional work both
within and outside of the prison context to the extent that we can begin to see a common source of racial subordination that
impacts a broader class of women.
*1304 While there are significant normative and political benefits to broadening the class of female prisoners who have
standing to pursue an antisubordination claim under the Eighth Amendment, there may be substantial disadvantages as well.
The racial harms and social meanings of shackling during labor and pregnancy may not be as salient for white women as for
Black women. As noted above regarding sterilizations and solitary confinement, in many respects, white women have been
comparatively advantaged within prisons. Indeed, historically and contemporarily they have been disproportionately diverted
away from confinement or punishment entirely. Moreover, given their relative racial privilege, the negative constructs do not
attach as strongly to white female prisoners. To the extent that white women do raise objections to the operation of the negative
constructs of Black women and their relationship to slavery, there is a risk that these arguments would reinforce rather than

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contest those racialized and gendered constructs because a court could perceive that the white women are complaining about
being treated like Black women rather than about the existence of the negative construct that shapes penal practices.
To allay concerns about the reinforcement of racialized and gendered ideologies about Black women in the context of claims
made by non-Black women, racial identity may be one factor a court may consider in determining whether a challenged practice
relies on racialized and gendered constructs that emerged out of slavery and the postslavery era and whether a practice constitutes
a badge or incident of slavery such that it should be deemed cruel under the Eighth Amendment. Given the historical constructs
and their relationship to contemporary practices, it may be the case that Black women have the strongest claim regarding a
contested practice and its relationship to slavery. At base, however, the central purpose of the antisubordination approach is not
the examination of an individual's racial identity, but rather the examination of the racial and gendered history and contemporary
salience of a challenged practice. It is structurally oriented such that it is concerned with rooting out racial and gender constructs
that are embedded in ostensibly race-neutral penal institutions and seeks to contest the ways in which race and gender structure
and shape punishment practices that impact all women.
c. Exception Clause No Bar to Symbolic Value of Thirteenth Amendment in the Context of Prison
As mentioned previously, the Thirteenth Amendment contains an exception clause that reads “[n]either slavery nor involuntary
servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United
States.” 390 However, because the Clause provides *1305 an exception only to involuntary servitude, and not slavery, 391 it
does not preclude an antisubordination reading that reaches the badges and incidents of slavery. 392 The exception is limited to
involuntary servitude for a number of reasons, including the intent of the Framers, the text of the Amendment, and subsequent
constitutional developments that render any exception regarding slavery obsolete. Thus, the Thirteenth Amendment remains
steadfast as a symbol of our nation's commitment to abolish not only slavery, but its permutations, even those that exist behind
the walls of prisons.
Little is known about the circumstances leading to the drafting of Section 1 and the Exception Clause of the Thirteenth
Amendment. 393 Legal scholars and historians, however, have suggested that the Amendment was patterned after the Northwest
Ordinance of 1789, 394 which was enacted to prohibit slavery in certain territories admitted to the United States, including
those of the Louisiana Purchase. 395 Importantly, the text of the Ordinance allowed the practice of involuntary labor as a
punishment for failure to pay a debt to continue. 396 In drafting the Exception Clause, the Reconstruction Congress may have
been attempting to make a similar distinction. If this is the case, the Exception Clause can be interpreted as allowing for
involuntary servitude in the context of prisons, not the operation of slavery or its badges and incidents.
This distinction is critical since “slavery” and “involuntary servitude” had distinct meanings at the adoption of the Northwest
Ordinance and the Thirteenth Amendment. The slave and the indentured servant were differentiated in critical respects, the most
central being that the latter's existence as a rights-bearing subject. As legal scholar Andrea Armstrong notes, “[t]he ‘social death’
of the enslaved, the community exclusion and exile, is imposed through symbols and rituals differentiating the enslaved from
the involuntary servant.” 397 The social death of the enslaved was expressed through a myriad of legal policies and practices that
separated slaves from the status of a person. 398 In Dred Scott v. Sandford, for example, the Supreme Court held that Blacks held
a status no higher than property and that they had “no rights *1306 which a white man was bound to respect.” 399 Blackness,
which became synonymous with slave status, was a racial category for which membership meant absolute vulnerability to
unmitigated violence and unspeakable brutality. The “peculiar institution” of slavery imposed intergenerational status as a
slave. 400 Slaves possessed no legal agency in that they could not marry and had no rights to their children. 401 By contrast,
“[i]nvoluntary servitude is not racially defined, i.e., membership in a particular race or ethnic group does not automatically

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confer servitude.” 402 Involuntary servitude was not intergenerational, nor did it strip those held in such servitude of their status
as rights-bearing subjects. Consequently, those held in prisons as indentured servants did not experience the total “civil or social
death” that deprived individuals of all rights as was the case with those designated as slaves.
Moreover, the text of the Thirteenth Amendment suggests a distinction between the term “slavery” and “involuntary servitude”
as used in Section 1 of the Amendment. Indeed, Andrea Armstrong argues that the terms have been conflated in analysis
of the Exception Clause. In particular, she notes that “[t] extually, the convict exception to the Thirteenth Amendment only
applies to conditions of involuntary servitude and not to slavery.” 403 To support this claim, Armstrong points to that the “rule
of the last antecedent.” 404 The rule of the last antecedent, a canon of judicial construction, “requires that a clause ‘should
ordinarily be read as modifying only the noun or phrase that it immediately follows.”’ 405 Under this rule, when a disjunctive
conjunction immediately precedes a modifying clause, “the modifying clause only applies to the last term and not the term
preceding the disjunctive conjunction.” 406 The word “nor” as used in the Exception Clause, which separates “slavery” from
“involuntary servitude” is a “considered a disjunctive conjunction and accordingly, the convict labor exception should only
apply to conditions of servitude and not to conditions of slavery.” 407 Consequently, the exception modifies only involuntary
servitude rather than slavery. 408 This reading is consistent with the resolution of various decisions expounding on the scope of
*1307 the Exception Clause. In those cases, courts have only permitted involuntary labor in prisons, while failing to engage
the question of slavery. 409
Any argument that the exception applies to slavery, moreover, is obsolete. As noted above, slavery created a racialized
regime that imposed a status of property rather than personhood on people of African descent who were designated as slaves.
Contemporarily, such a status has become inconsistent with the Constitution for a number of reasons. First, at a minimum,
the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause outlaws state action that mandates the type of racial hierarchy that was
essential to the system of slavery. 410 Second, the Fourteenth Amendment, through its Due Process Clause, entitles citizens,
even those in prison, a broad array of constitutional protections, including the right to be free of cruel and unusual punishments.
Initially, the Eighth Amendment did not regulate state punishments. 411 In 1962, however, the Supreme Court made clear that
the Eighth Amendment is binding upon the states via the Fourteenth Amendment in Robinson v. California. 412 The Court
has read the Eighth Amendment's cruel and unusual punishments clause as prohibiting the application of punishments that
result in social death. 413 In Trop v. Dulles, the Court held that the challenged sentence, denationalization, constituted “the total
destruction of the individual's status in organized society.” 414 The Court's ruling in Trop is incompatible with a state of total
bondage that was the hallmark of chattel slavery. In other words, for one to be held in a state of bondage as required by slavery,
it would necessitate the same sort of “destruction of an individual's status in organized society” that was invalidated in Trop.
This, combined with the Fourteenth Amendment's repudiation of overt racial exclusion and its reversal of the historic denial of
the rights of citizenship to Blacks, suggest that slavery, were it authorized within prisons by the Thirteenth Amendment, could
not constitutionally operate in light of other constitutional provisions.
Given the history of the Thirteenth Amendment and its text and subsequent constitutional developments that bear on it scope,
it is clear that its provisions reach beyond the walls of prisons. Indeed, the Court has applied the Thirteenth Amendment in the
context of the criminal law on at least one *1308 occasion. In Bailey v. Alabama, the Supreme Court upheld the statute and
its application in the context of the criminal law. 415 Indeed, while acknowledging that the Thirteenth Amendment prohibits
involuntary servitude except as punishment for a crime, the Court asserted:
[T]he exception, allowing full latitude for the enforcement of penal laws, does not destroy the prohibition. It does not permit
slavery or involuntary servitude to be established or maintained through the operation of the criminal law by making it a crime
to refuse to submit to one or to render the service which would constitute the other. 416

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Under this reading, there are limitations to the way in which the criminal law may be used. While states may extract forced
labor from individuals who are duly convicted of a crime, there are limits on how such labor may be extracted. They may not,
for example, use the criminal law to maintain racial dominance or to facilitate broad scale racial and economic exploitation
akin to slavery through the criminalization of breach of contract. 417

In this Section, I have argued that the Thirteenth Amendment's Exception Clause does not permit slavery within jails or prisons.
Rather, the Amendment's prohibition remains in effect despite a criminal conviction. The Amendment's prohibition, however,
extends beyond slavery to reach its “badges and incidents.” 418 In the Section that follows, I will discuss how the use of shackles
on pregnant prisoners during labor and childbirth constitutes a badge or incident of slavery that is inconsistent with the values
of the Thirteenth Amendment and therefore with evolving standards of decency. This is so given the historical devaluation
and control of Black women during slavery and post-Civil War punishment regimes, which have now been largely repudiated.
Because of this association, I argue that the practice of shackling should be prohibited outright as it is informed by this troubled
historical linkage.

B. Social Meaning of the Shackling of Pregnant Prisoners and Conflict with the Antisubordination Values of the
Thirteenth Amendment
The social meaning of a challenged practice and its historical linkage to repudiated regimes, such as slavery and the post-Civil
War era, are critical to assessing whether a practice is inconsistent with evolving standards of decency and whether it should
therefore be deemed “cruel” under the Eighth Amendment. To the extent that a punishment practice is traceable to the era of
chattel slavery and racial domination, it may be deemed a badge or incident of *1309 slavery and therefore condemned as
“cruel” under the auspices of the Eighth Amendment.
As I described in Part II, the devaluation of Black women, the repeated violations of their bodily integrity, the restrictions on
their sexual autonomy, and the demonization of Black womanhood are outgrowths of the era of chattel slavery. Black women
were often punished for their failure to produce offspring and were given little respite from the backbreaking demands of field
labor during pregnancy. Even during pregnancy, women were brutally punished by whipping and shackling. The exploitation
of Black women as laborers and as a source of populating additional labor was justified based on the social construction of
Black women as deviating from traditional standards of womanhood. Indeed, as Andrew Koppleman notes, “loss of control
over one's reproductive capacities were partially constitutive of slavery for most [B]lack women of childbearing age.” 419
Following the prohibition of slavery, Black women did not fare much better. Drawing upon preexisting racial constructions of
Black women that arose during slavery, the carceral apparatus that emerged during the post-Civil War era positioned Black
women as masculine, deviant, dangerous, and therefore punishable in a way that white women were not. In the context of
convict leasing and chain gangs, these images were drawn upon and Black women were punished as a means of exploiting their
labor. On the chain gangs, their legs were placed in manacles and they were forced to engage in arduous labor on railroads,
streets, and in coal mines. As in slavery, pregnancy did not insulate Black women from performing these tasks; instead, they
were worked, feet in chains and under the threat of the lash, often up until the onset of labor. Critical for the purposes of this
doctrinal engagement, Black women were often punished for their pregnancies through more demanding work assignments,
the denial of medical assistance, and the separation from their children after childbirth. 420
For many, the placement of shackles on the arms, legs, and bellies of pregnant prisoners during labor and childbirth, when
these women are most vulnerable, invokes images of the profound degradation and denial of physical autonomy of slavery and

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the postslavery era. The antisubordination approach to the Eighth Amendment renders these gendered and racial connections
visible and cognizable in the determination of constitutional injury.
Given the historical association with the degradation and devaluation of Black women during slavery, the punitive regimes
that followed it and the punishment of the reproductive expressions of women in contemporary prison, the use of shackles
on pregnant prisoners during labor and childbirth should be seen as a badge or incident of slavery. This badge is affixed to
all women who *1310 occupy the category of female prisoner and who inhabit the racialized space of the women's prison,
regardless of their own racial identity. Based on this connection to slavery and its broad impact, the practice should be viewed
as inconsistent with our evolving standards of decency and therefore deemed cruel and unusual punishment with respect to
all female prisoners.
In sum, this relationship between historical constructions of Black women and contemporary shackling of pregnant prisoners
during labor and childbirth must, therefore, inform our conceptions of cruelty within the context of Eighth Amendment
jurisprudence. By reading this punishment as “cruel” for purposes of the Eighth Amendment, and taking into account this
historical relationship and the values represented by the Thirteenth Amendment, the Court can deploy the moral force of the
Constitution to root out dehumanizing practices such as the shackling of pregnant prisoners not only at the individual level,
but at the institutional level as well.

Conclusion
“The past is not dead. It's not even past.” 421

The past is represented, quite viscerally and violently, in prisons across the country when pregnant prisoners are chained at the
hands, waist, and feet during transport to the hospital at the onset of labor. It operates when guards shackle pregnant prisoners to
bedrails during the delivery of their children and during recovery. But all too often, in judicial, scholarly, and public discourses
regarding the practice, the past is rendered mute and invisible.
The past is made visible, however, when Black women are centered and when the practice of shackling pregnant prisoners
is situated in a historical context of racial subjugation. When placed in this context, we can see the continuities between the
degradation and devaluation of Black women during slavery, convict leasing, and chain gangs and the modern dehumanization
of female prisoners through the use of shackles during childbirth. The constructions of Black women as masculine, deviant, and
dangerous constitute the metaphorical scaffolding of women's prisons, framing experiences within institutions and justifying
the application of harsh conditions upon all imprisoned women.
Despite the impact of this history, it has been conspicuously absent in our Eighth Amendment jurisprudence. As a consequence,
we compromise our ability to challenge the shackling of pregnant women during childbirth and to contest the racial and gender
constructions that animate the practice. A race- and gender-conscious approach to punishment, therefore, is necessary. In this
Article, I have offered a reading of the Eighth Amendment that recognizes the historical subordination of Black women, the
denigration of their reproductive capacities, and the devaluation of their identities as mothers. Under this *1311 approach to
the Eighth Amendment, we can leverage the moral authority and antisubordination command represented by the Thirteenth
Amendment to make our constitutional commitment to evolving standards of decency real and functional within our nation's
prisons.

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Footnotes
a1
Copyright © 2012 California Law Review, Inc. California Law Review, Inc. (CLR) is a California nonprofit corporation. CLR and
the authors are solely responsible for the content of their publications.

a2

Associate Professor of Law, Loyola Law School, Los Angeles. Versions of this Article were presented to the 2011 Advanced
Critical Race Studies Seminar at UCLA School of Law, the UCLA Critical Race Studies Works-in-Progress Series, the 2011 African
American Girls and the Juvenile Justice System Symposium at U.C. Berkeley School of Law, and the 2011 Southern California Junior
Faculty Workshop. I would like to thank Tauny Lovell Banks, Devon Carbado, Sharon Dolovich, Kolleen Duley, Cheryl Harris,
Addie Rolnick, Ronald Williams II, Steve Yeazell, Noah Zatz, and Mike Zimmer for their thoughtful comments. I am also indebted
to Kimberlé Crenshaw, Carole Goldberg, Jerry Kang, and Saul Sarabia for their willingness to serve as sounding boards for many
of the ideas contained in this Article. I am also thankful for the expert research assistance provided by Alisha Burgin, Karla Crone,
and Alexandra Oprea. I am particularly grateful to the UCLA School of Law generally, and the Critical Race Studies Program in
particular, for their faith in, and support for, this project. Finally, I dedicate this Article to my late mother, Audrey R. Ocen, in whose
memory I seek to explore and challenge barriers to racial equity.

1

James Baldwin, An Open Letter to My Sister Angela, in If they Come in the Morning 13 (Angela Davis ed., 1971).

2

I capitalize Black because as Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw explains, it “reflect[s] my view that Blacks, like Asians, Latinos, and other
‘minorities,’ constitute a specific cultural group and, as such, require denotation as a proper noun.” Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw,
Race, Reform, and Retrenchment: Transformation and Legitimation in Antidiscrimination Law, 101 Harv. L. Rev. 1331, 1332 n.2
(1988).

3

Inside This Place, Not of It: Narratives from Women's Prisons 29-31 (Robin Levi & Ayelet Waldman eds., 2011).

4

Id. at 28-29.

5

Id. at 30 (“I was [in jail in Georgia] about a month before I actually saw a doctor.”).

6

Id. at 34 (“But she made me keep the shackles on me when I went in for the c-section.”); see also Amnesty Int'l USA, “Not Part of
My Sentence”-- Violations of the Human Rights of Women in Custody 11 (1999), available at http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/
asset/AMR51/019/1999/en/7588269a-e33d-11dd-808b-bfd8d459a3de/amr510191999en.pdf (detailing the use of restraints on female
prisoners during labor and childbirth in California as well as other prisons in the United States).

7

Inside This Place, Not of It: Narratives from Women's Prisons, supra note 3, at 34.

8

Anne M. Butler, Gendered Justice in the American West, 165-66 (1997) (citing testimony regarding Elvira's experience from a Texas
legislative committee investigating conditions at Eastham Camp).

9

In the post-Civil War South, African Americans were often arrested for offenses that were fabricated or on charges that would have
been ignored if committed by whites. See, e.g., Douglas A. Blackmon, Slavery by Another Name: The Re-enslavement of Black
Americans from the Civil War to World War II 5-7 (2009); Butler, supra note 8, at 5 (noting that women served their sentences in
men's institutions).

10

When sentencing Black women, pregnancy was not taken into consideration as a mitigating factor. See infra notes 159-68.

11

According to a Texas State Archives and Library exhibit on Texas prisons, “[i]n 1908, the African-American women were
moved to a camp at Eastham Farm, about 20 miles north of Huntsville, where they were subject to whippings and sexual
misconduct by the guards.” See Tex. State Library and Archives Comm'n, Fear, Force and Leather: The Texas Prison System's
First Hundred Years, 1848-1948, http://www.tsl.state.tx.us/exhibits/prisons/convictlease/women.html (last visited July 14, 2012)
(“Several pregnant women were forced to work up until the time of delivery and to give birth in the fields.”).

12

Butler, supra note 8, at 165-66.

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13

Id.

14

Id.

15

Dana L. Sichel, Giving Birth in Shackles: A Constitutional and Human Rights Violation, 16 Am. U. J. Gender Soc. Pol'y & L. 223,
235(2007).

16

Invisible Punishment: The Collateral Consequences of Mass Imprisonment 79 (Marc Mauer & Meda Chesney-Lind eds., 2002).

17

I use the term “racialized” to capture the “discursive process by which particular groups have been classified as non-white, specific
meanings have been attached to those groups, and those meanings have been used to support the hierarchical distribution of power,
land, and resources.” Addie C. Rolnick, The Promise of Mancari: Indian Political Rights as Racial Remedy, 86 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 958,
965 n.31 (2011) (citing Michael Omi & Howard Winant, Racial Formation in the United States: From the 1960s to the 1990s (2d
ed. 1994)).

18

See, e.g., Lisa Ikemoto, The In/Fertile, Too Fertile and Disfertile, 47 Hastings L.J. 1007, 1045-53 (1997) (discussing deviant
motherhood); Dorothy Roberts, Punishing Drug Addicts Who Have Babies: Women of Color, Equality, and the Right to Privacy, 104
Harv. L. Rev. 1419, 1424 (1991) (noting that in the context of the prosecution of drug-addicted mothers, “[p]oor Black women have
been selected for punishment as a result of an inseparable combination of their gender, race, and economic status. Their devaluation
as mothers, which underlies the prosecutions, has its roots in the unique experience of slavery and has been perpetuated by complex
social forces”).

19

Convict leasing was a system of penal labor practiced predominately, though not exclusively, in the Southern United States. The
system emerged following the Civil War and was almost exclusively applied to newly freed slaves, who were often convicted of
minor crimes on the basis of little or no evidence. Those convicted of crimes were leased from the state to private individuals,
businesses, and corporations in all manner of industries, including agriculture, mining, and railroad and levee construction. Payment
for the labor of those leased was made to the state. See, e.g., Blackmon, supra note 9, at 4 (noting that convict leasing was a “system
in which armies of free men, guilty of no crimes and entitled by law to freedom, were compelled to labor without compensation,
were repeatedly bought and sold, and were forced to do the bidding of white masters through the regular application of extraordinary
physical coercion”); David Oshinsky, “Worse Than Slavery”: Parchman Farm and the Ordeal of Jim Crow Justice 40-41 (1996).

20

Following the abolition of convict leasing in many Southern states, the chain gang was established as a new system of exploitative
labor promulgated by prisons and local county jails. See generally Alex Lichtenstein, Good Roads and Chain Gangs in the Progressive
South: “The Negro Convict is a Slave,” 59 J. S. Hist. 85 (1993) (discussing the development of chain gangs in Southern states after
the abolition of convict leasing, and noting that chain gangs were originally viewed as a positive, progressive reform). Rather than
leasing prisoners for the benefit of private industry, jail and prison administrators forced prisoners--who were almost all Black--to
labor on plantations, roads, and other public works projects. See, e.g., Milfred C. Fierce, Slavery Revisited: Blacks and the Southern
Convict Lease System, 1865-1933, at 11-13, 194 (1994). Prisoners were worked in public and chained to one another as they engaged
in coerced labor. See Jamison v. Wimbish, 130 F. 351, 355 (D.C. Ga. 1904) (“The sufferers wear the typical striped clothing of
the penitentiary convict. Iron manacles are riveted upon their legs. These can be removed only by the use of the cold chisel. The
irons on each leg are connected by chains.”). The chains remained fastened around the ankles of prisoners even as they rested. See
Tessa M. Gorman, Back on the Chain Gang: Why the Eighth Amendment and the History of Slavery Proscribe the Resurgence of
Chain Gangs, 85 Calif. L. Rev. 441, 452 (1997) (“The convicts were usually harnessed together with chains at all times, even while
eating or sleeping.”).

21

See, e.g., Michelle Alexander, The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness 26-35 (2009); Dorothy Roberts,
Race, Crime, and Reproduction, 67 Tul. L. Rev. 1945, 1954-61(1995).

22

See generally Alexander, supra note 21 (arguing that mass incarceration, although race neutral, relies on assumptions of Black
criminality and functions as a mechanism of racial subordination).

23

See, e.g., Kimberlé Crenshaw, Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex: A Black Feminist Critique of Antidiscrimination
Law, 1989 U. Chi. Legal F. 139 (1989).

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24

See, e.g., Kim Shayo Buchanan, Beyond Modesty: Privacy in Prison and the Risk of Sexual Abuse, 88 Marq. L. Rev. 751, 789 (2004)
(noting that judicial perceptions of female prisoners are informed by stereotypical constructs of Black women).

25

See, e.g., Ruth Wilson Gilmore, The Golden Gulag: Prisons, Surplus, Crisis and Opposition in Globalizing California (2007).

26

See, e.g., Jenni Vainik, The Reproductive Rights of Incarcerated Mothers, 46 Fam. Ct. Rev. 670, 672-74 (2008) (noting that starting
in the 1870s, “a woman's race dictated the type of penal institution where she would serve her sentence,” and that “[t]he type of
punishment used at each institution implicitly reinforced the racist and sexist stereotypes of the time”); Angela Y. Davis, From the
Prison of Slavery to the Slavery of Prison: Frederick Douglass and the Convict Lease System, in The Angela Y. Davis Reader 75-89
(Joy James ed., 1998) (tracking the racialization of specific crimes and of the penal system in post-Civil War America).

27

The claim advanced in this Article is not that shackling is applied to pregnant Black female prisoners in a racially disproportionate
manner (though there is certainly evidence that it is). Rather, this Article seeks to interrogate the ideological and structural
underpinnings of shackling practices that impact all female prisoners, but that rest on stereotypical racial and gender constructions
of Black women. Using shackling as a metaphor in the service of a broader claim regarding the social meaning of particular forms
of punishment, this Article will also explore the ways in which the social meanings of punishment practices contribute to their
normalization within prison environments.

28

See, e.g., Mona Lynch, Sunbelt Justice: Arizona and the Transformation of American Punishment 2-3 (2010).

29

See infra notes 131-143 and accompanying text.

30

The structural argument advanced here is in many ways analogous to recent scholarship suggesting that workplaces can be “racialized
over time” and that all workers within the racialized workplace are subject to degrading treatment, even if they are not members of
the racialized group. In other words, this scholarship demonstrates that racialized occupational categories shape both the workplace
environment and the public perceptions of all of the employees. See, e.g., Leticia Saucedo, Three Theories of Discrimination in the
Brown Collar Workforce, 1 U. Chi. Legal F. 345 (2009); Leticia Saucedo, The Employer Preference for the Subservient Worker and
the Making of the Brown Collar Workforce, 67 Ohio St. L.J. 964 (2006).

31

See, e.g., ACLU Challenges Prison-like Conditions at Hutto Detention Center, ACLU (Mar. 6, 2007), http://www.aclu.org/
immigrants-rights-racial-justice-prisoners-rights/aclu-challenges-prison-conditions-hutto-detention; Rafael Romo & Nick Valencia,
ACLU: Lawsuit Alleges 3 Immigrant Women Assaulted While in ICE Custody, CNN (Oct. 21, 2011, 1:53 AM), http://
www.cnn.com/2011/10/21/justice/us-detainees-assault-suit/index.html.

32

429 U.S. 97 (1976).

33

See, e.g., Sharon Dolovich, Cruelty, Prison Conditions, and the Eighth Amendment, 84 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 881 (2009); Alice Ristroph,
State Intentions and the Law of Punishment, 98 J. Crim. L. & Criminology 1353, 1357-60 (2008) (suggesting that an intent-based
theory of state action is inappropriate in the Eighth Amendment context).

34

See, e.g., Robin Levi et al., Creating the “Bad Mother:” How the U.S. Approach to Pregnancy in Prison Violates the Right to Be
a Mother, 18 UCLA Women's L.J. 1 (2010) (discussing the shackling of pregnant women in prison and placing the practice in the
context of eugenics and welfare supervision. The authors argue for a remedy derived from a human rights framework rather than
the Eighth Amendment. While the authors note the disproportionate number of women of color in prisons, they do not discuss the
role that race plays in normalizing those practices); Elizabeth Alexander, Unshackling Shawanna: The Battle over Chaining Women
Prisoners During Labor and Delivery, 32 U. Ark. Little Rock L. Rev. 435 (2010) (provides a summary of the proceedings in Nelson
v. Correctional Medical Services and briefly describes the harms associated with shackling, but it does not situate the practice within
the overall devaluation of the reproductive capacities of female prisoners generally or of Black women in particular); Sichel, supra
note 15 (arguing that shackling pregnant women during labor violates both the Eighth Amendment and international human rights
standards but does not discuss race or racialized aspects of the practice); Heather L. McCrary, Pregnant Behind Bars: Chapter 608 and
California's Reformation of the Medical Care and Treatment of Pregnant Women, 37 McGeorge L. Rev. 314 (2006) (summarizing
the trend of shackling pregnant prisoners and the changes to California law regarding the treatment of pregnant women in prison).
One article argues that shackling violates human rights norms and notes that Black women have been particularly impacted. Dana

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Sussman, Bound by Injustice: Challenging the Use of Shackles on Incarcerated Pregnant Women, 15 Cardozo J.L. & Gender 477
(2009). The author also demonstrates that contemporary shackling “parallels” slavery in many respects. Id. at 482. While the article
usefully notes the parallel between contemporary shackling and slavery, it does not interrogate the relationship between the history
of racial subordination of Black women and the normalization of these practices. Rather than merely paralleling slavery, I argue that
the practice of shackling exists because of slavery and the punitive practices that emerged in its wake.

35

See Estelle B. Freedman, Their Sisters' Keepers: Women's Prison Reform in America, 1830-1930, at 96 (1984) (noting that early
women's reformatories implemented “new feminine methods stress[ing] the other parts of inmates' female identities: their nonsexual,
maternal, sentimental sides”); id. at 101 (documenting the imprisonment of women for the crime of having “sexual relations”).

36

Vainik, supra note 26, at 672-74.

37

583 F.3d 522 (8th Cir. 2009).

38

712 F. Supp. 2d 1208 (W.D. Wash. 2010).

39

See infra notes 251-57.

40

See, e.g., Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537, 555-58 (1896) (Harlan, J., dissenting); Bailey v. Alabama, 219 U.S. 219, 227, 241-44
(1911).

41

Plessy, 163 U.S. at 555-58 (Harlan, J., dissenting) (arguing that racial segregation constituted a badge or incident of slavery that is
prohibited by the Thirteenth Amendment).

42

See, e.g., Owen M. Fiss, Groups and the Equal Protection Clause, 5 Phil. & Pub. Aff. 107 (1976); Reva B. Siegel, Discrimination
in the Eyes of the Law: How “Color Blindness” Discourse Disrupts and Rationalizes Social Stratification, 88 Calif. L. Rev. 77,
106 (2000); J.M. Balkin, The Constitution of Status, 106 Yale L.J. 2313, 2358 (1997); Reva B. Siegel, Why Equal Protection No
Longer Protects: The Evolving Forms of Status - Enforcing State Action, 49 Stan. L. Rev. 1111, 1143-45 (1997); Kenji Yoshino,
Assimilationist Bias in Equal Protection: The Visibility Presumption and the Case of “Don't Ask, Don't Tell,” 108 Yale L.J. 485,
558 (1998) (noting that the equal protection inquiry should emphasize “classes over classifications, antisubordination over formal
equality”); Charles R. Lawrence III, Race, Multiculturalism, and the Jurisprudence of Transformation, 47 Stan. L. Rev. 819, 824-25
(1995) (characterizing equality as a “substantive societal condition rather than as an individual right”).

43

Dolovich, supra note 33, at 907.

44

See Sarah Haley, Engendering Captivity: Black Women and Convict Labor in Georgia, 1865-1938, at 3-4, 10 (May 2010)
(unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Yale University) (on file with author); Cf. Angela Y. Davis, Surrogates and Outcast Mothers: Racism
and Reproductive Politics in the Nineties, in The Angela Y. Davis Reader 218 (Joy James ed., 1998) (arguing that women's prisons
have historically functioned to police the boundaries of feminine deviance).

45

533 F.3d 958, 961 (8th Cir. 2008), vacated, 583 F.3d 552 (8th Cir. 2009).

46

712 F. Supp. 2d 1208, 1211 (W.D. Wash. 2010).

47

Colleen Mastony, Childbirth in Chains, Chi. Trib., July 18, 2010, http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2010-07-18/news/ct-metshackled-mothers-20100718_1_shackles-handcuffs-labor (quoting Latiana Walton, a Black woman challenging the use of shackles
during childbirth by Cook County Sherriff's Deputies in a class-action lawsuit).

48

See, e.g., Jonathan Simon, Governing Through Crime: How the War on Crime Transformed American Democracy and Created a
Culture of Fear 13-31 (2007) (discussing the overall impact of crime on the United States from the 1960s to present).

49

Lawrence D. Bobo & Victor Thompson, Racialized Mass Incarceration: Poverty, Prejudice, and Punishment, in Doing Race: 21
Essays for the 21st Century 330-36 (Hazel R. Markus & Paula Moya eds., 2010).

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50

See, e.g., Alexander, supra note 21; Ian Haney López, Post-Racial Racism: Racial Stratification and Mass Incarceration in the Age
of Obama, 98 Calif. L. Rev. 1023, 1040-52 (2010).

51

See Heather C. West, Prison Inmates at Midyear 2009, Bureau of Justice Statistics 7 (2009).

52

Id.

53

See Julia Sudbury, Women of Color, Globalization and the Politics of Incarceration, in The Criminal Justice System and Women 13
(Barbara Rattel Price and Natalie Sokoloff eds., 2003).

54

West, supra note 51, at 7; Lauren E. Glaze & Thomas P. Bonczar, U.S. Dep't of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Probation and
Parole in the United States, 2010, at 34, 44 (2011), available at http:// bjs.ojp.usdoj.gov/content/pub/pdf/ppus10.pdf.

55

West, supra note 47, at 19.

56

As of the most recent available census data from the year 2000, there were approximately 18 million Black women in the United States.
This represented roughly 7 percent of the total U.S. population of 272 million. See Renee E. Spraggins, U.S. Dep't of Commerce, U.S.
Census Bureau, Census Brief: Women in the United States: A Profile 1 (2000), available at http:// www.census.gov/prod/2000pubs/
cenbr001.pdf.

57

Paula C. Johnson, Inner Lives: Voices of African American Women in Prison 6 (2003).

58

See Lenora Lapidus et. al., ACLU, Brennan Ctr. for Justice & Break the Chains, Caught in the Net: The Impact of Drug Policies
on Women and Families 345 (2005).

59

Id.

60

See Katheryn Watterson, Women in Prison: Inside the Concrete Womb 211 (1996) (noting the number of pregnant female prisoners).

61

Id.; Adam Liptak, Prisons Often Shackle Pregnant Inmates in Labor, N.Y. Times, Mar. 2, 2006, at A16 (noting the number of children
born to incarcerated mothers).

62

See, e.g., Amnesty Int'l, Women in Custody 30-33, available at http://www.amnestyusa.org/pdf/custodyissues.pdf [hereinafter
Women in Custody]; Amnesty Int'l USA, supra note 6, at 10-12.

63

See, e.g., Women in Custody, supra note 62, at 30-33, Amnesty Int'l USA, supra note 6, at 10-12; see also Karen Shain, Legal Servs.
for Prisoners with Children, Stop Shackling: A Report on the Written Policies of California's Counties on the Use of Restraints on
Pregnant Prisoners in Labor (2010), available at http://www.prisonerswithchildren.org/pubs/stop_shackling.pdf.

64

See Anna Enisa Carpenter, Memorandum: State Shackling Policies (Aug. 20, 2008), http://www.rebeccaproject.org/images/stories/
policypapers/state_ shackling_policies_memo.pdf (discussing half of the states' policies on shackling pregnant inmates); Shackling
of Pregnant Women in Custody, The Rebecca Project for Human Rights, http:// www.rebeccaproject.org/images/stories/factsheets/
ShacklingFactSheet_7-12-10.pdf (noting that only ten states had laws prohibiting the use of shackles on pregnant prisoners during
labor and childbirth).
Black women are not alone in experiencing these harmful impacts at the intersection of race, gender, and incarceration.
Increasingly, undocumented Latinas have been targeted for arrests stemming from structural inequalities in the economy and in
the immigration system. Tanya Doriss, Fact Sheet: Immigration Policy and Reproductive Justice, Ctr. for Am. Progress (July
10, 2007), http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2007/07/womens_rights_ factsheet.html (“Female immigrants, both documented
and undocumented, often work in industries that are low-wage and do not offer health insurance.”). Undocumented Latinas are
increasingly arrested and prosecuted for immigration violations, particularly during workplace raids and drug offenses. See Nina
Rabin, Unseen Prisoners: Women in Immigration Detention Facilities in Arizona, 23 Geo. Immigr. L.J. 695, 702-03 (2009).
While detained during removal proceedings, undocumented Latinas have been shackled during childbirth and denied basic medical
necessities. See Human Rights Watch, Detained and Dismissed: Women's Struggles to Obtain Health Care in United States
Immigration Detention (2009); Christina Costantini, Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio Sued by Undocumented Woman Shackled During

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Labor, Huffington Post (Dec. 21, 2011, 3:59 PM), http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/21/sheriff-joe-arpaio_n_ 1163490.html.
Furthermore, like formerly incarcerated Black women, they are vulnerable to sexual and physical abuse while incarcerated. See Hum.
Rts. Watch, Detained and at Risk: Sexual Abuse and Harassment in United States Immigration Detention, (Aug. 25, 2010), http://
www.hrw.org/en/reports/2010/08/25/detained-and-risk.

65

See, e.g., Leith Mullings, On Our Own Terms: Race, Class, and Gender in the Lives of African American Women 109-31 (1997).

66

Andrea Smith, Conquest: Sexual Violence and American Indian Genocide 89 (2005);see also People v. Johnson, No. F015316, 1992
WL 685375 (Cal. Ct. App. Apr. 13, 1992) (unpublished) (requiring a criminal defendant to use a Norplant birth control implant as a
condition of probation). See generally Janet F. Ginzberg, Note, Compulsory Contraception as a Condition of Probation: The Use and
Abuse of Norplant, 58 Brook. L. Rev. 979 (1992) (discussing the ways in which the judicial system has mandated that women have
to undergo birth control treatments as part of their probation requirements); Rachel Roth, “No New Babies?”: Gender Inequality and
Reproductive Control in the Criminal Justice and Prison Systems, 12 Am. U. J. Gender Soc. Pol'y & L. 391, 407 (2004) (discussing
the required use of birth control in lieu of jail or prison time).

67

See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Welch, 864 S.W.2d 280 (Ky. 1993) (vacating the trial court's determination that a drug-addicted mother
criminally abused her child for using drugs during her pregnancy); see generally Roberts, supra note 21.

68

Brandon Loomis, Measure on Illegal Abortions Heads to Governor, Salt Lake Trib., Feb. 18, 2010, http://www.sltrib.com/news/
ci_14429070; Jen Qudraishi, Ga. Law Could Give Death Penalty for Miscarriages, Mother Jones (Feb. 23, 2011, 5:32 AM), http://
www.motherjones.com/blue-marble/2011/02/miscarriage-death-penalty-georgia.

69

See, e.g., Kim Shayo Buchanan, Impunity: Sexual Abuse in Women's Prisons, 42 Harv. C.R-C.L L. Rev. 45 (2007) (hereinafter
Buchanan, Impunity); Buchanan, supra note 24.

70

Cassandra Shaylor, It's Like Living in a Black Hole: Women of Color and Solitary Confinement in the Prison Industrial Complex,
24 New Eng. J. on Crim. & Civ. Confinement 385, 395 (1998).

71

See, e.g., Human Rights Program at Justice Now, Prisons as a Tool of Reproductive Oppression, 5 Stan. J. Civ. Rts. & Civ. Liberties
309 (2009); Cynthia Chandler, Death and Dying in America: The Prison Industrial Complex's Impact on Women's Health, 18 Berkeley
Women's L. J. 40 (2003).

72

See, e.g., Amnesty Int'l USA, supra note 6; Human Rights Watch, All Too Familiar (1996), available at http:// www.hrw.org/legacy/
reports/1996/Us1.htm#_1_2.

73

See Buchanan, Impunity, supra note 69, at 53 (“Racial stereotypes of black women as promiscuous, criminal, and prone to violence
make it more difficult for law and society to recognize their victimization and more likely that they will be scrutinized as sexual
deviants and potential criminals.”).

74

Id. at 57; Gabriel Arkles, Safety and Solidarity Across Gender Lines: Re-thinking Segregation of Transgender People in Detention,
18 Temp. Pol. & Civ. Rts. L. Rev. 515 (2009); Brenda V. Smith, Watching You, Watching Me, 15 Yale J.L. & Feminism (2003).

75

See Buchanan, Impunity, supra note 69, at 55-57 (discussing how prison guards often extend unofficial accommodations to favored
inmates while using illegal forms of intimidation and force on others).

76

See Human Rights Watch, supra note 72, at 57.

77

See Buchanan, Impunity, supra note 69, at 64-82 (describing the ways in which contemporary rules of prison law block nearly all
claims against institutions for custodial abuse).

78

See, e.g., Ikemoto, supra note 18, at 1045-53 (discussing deviant motherhood and women of color).

79

518 F. Supp. 789 (W.D. Va. 1981).

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80

Cynthia Chandler, Justice Now, Testimony of Justice Now Submitted to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Violence Against
Women 4 (2011); see also Human Rights Program at Justice Now, supra note 71, at 321-25 (noting the disproportionate use of
inappropriate hysterectomies on women of color in California women's prisons). See generally Poe v. Lynchburg Training Sch. &
Hosp., 518 F. Supp. 789 (W.D. Va. 1981) (challenging involuntary sterilization procedures in a Virginia correctional institution).

81

See Human Rights Program at Justice Now, supra note 71, at 322 (“We also have learned of several cases of people being asked to
consent to sterilization without full information or when under sedation.”).

82

See Ellen Barry, Pregnant, Addicted and Sentenced: Debunking the Myths of Medical Treatment in Prison, 5 Crim. Just. 23 (1991).

83

See, e.g., Staten v. Lackawanna Cnty., No. 4:07-CV-1329, 2008 WL 249988, at *2 (M.D. Pa. Jan. 29, 2008) (African American
woman denied medical care by jail staff and forced to deliver the baby alone in her jail cell); Barry, supra note 82, at 23 (describing
two pregnant, drug-dependent women who were forced to detoxify without adequate medical care or supervision, even during labor).

84

Chris Legeros, Lawsuit over ‘Horrific’ Jail Cell Birth Moves Forward, KIRO Eyewitness 7 News (Apr. 28, 2011, 4:44 PM), http://
www.kirotv.com/news/27710266/detail.html.

85

Id.; see also Pope v. McComas, No. 07-cv-1191-RSM-JPD, 2011 WL 1584213 (W.D. Wash. Mar. 10, 2011).

86

Ex-Inmate Sues Prison over Giving Birth in Toilet, Omaha World-Herald, Oct. 16, 2011, at 2B.

87

Charles Schillinger, Woman Who Gave Birth at Prison: No Justice Yet, Times-Trib., Aug. 15, 2010, http://thetimes-tribune.com/
news/woman-who-gave-birth-at-prison-no-justice-yet-1.949114.

88

See Heidi Murkoff & Sharon Mazel, What to Expect When You're Expecting 367-91 (2008).

89

Id.

90

Phases of Labor, What to Expect: Pregnancy & Parenting Every Step of the Way, http://www.whattoexpect.com/pregnancy/laborand-delivery/childbirth-stages/three-phases-of-labor.aspx (last visited July 14, 2012).

91

See Women's Prison Ass'n: Institute on Women and Criminal Justice, Laws Banning Shackling During Childbirth Gaining Momentum
Nationwide, available at http://www.wpaonline.org/pdf/Shackling%20Brief_final.pdf. States prohibiting the use of shackles during
labor or childbirth include California, New York, Illinois, New Mexico, Nevada, Vermont, Texas, Washington, Rhode Island,
Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia.

92

Andrea Hsu, Difficult Births: Laboring and Delivering in Shackles, Nat'l Pub. Radio (July 16, 2010), http://www.npr.org/templates/
story/story.php? storyId=128563037.

93

Id.

94

Id.

95

Id.; see also Abuse of Women in Custody: Sexual Misconduct and Shackling of Pregnant Women, Amnesty
Int'l, http://www.amnestyusa.org/violence-against-women/abuse-of-women-in-custody/key-findings-use-of-restraints-on-pregnantwomen-in-custody/page.do?id=1108300 (last visited Aug. 7, 2012) (finding that thirty-eight state departments of corrections may
use restraints on pregnant women in the third trimester, while another twenty-three state departments of corrections allow the use
of restraints during labor).

96

See Hsu, supra note 92. Some have suggested that the policy simply treats women like incarcerated men, who are similarly
shackled during transport to noncustodial settings such as hospitals. Id. The equality rationale for the use of shackles is in some
respects accurate, but not entirely. In jurisdictions that permit shackling, prison officials promulgate regulations requiring the
use of shackles when prisoners are moved from the prison setting to a noncustodial facility such as a hospital. Restraints are
often used on male prisoners during treatment, including chemotherapy, consultation with doctors, and even when individuals are
nonambulatory following a treatment. Generally, however, individuals are not shackled during surgical procedures, which might be

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the most analogous to childbirth. See, e.g., Cal. Code Regs. tit. 15, § 3268.2(b)(1) (2011) (noting that restraints must be used when
transporting a prisoner between locations); La. State Univ. Health Scis. Ctr., Hospital Policy Manual 2 (2009), available at http://
www.sh.lsuhsc.edu/policies/policy_manuals_via_ms_word/hospital_policy/h_ 2.20.0.pdf (requiring prisoners to be shackled during
hospital stay, unless inconsistent with medical care); Ga. Code Ann. § 42-5-58 (2006) (“Handcuffs, leg chains, waist chains, and
waist belts may also be used in securing violent or potentially dangerous inmates within an institution and in public and private areas
such as hospitals and clinics; but in no event may handcuffs, leg chains, waist chains, and waist belts be used as punishment ....”).

97

Amnesty Int'l USA, supra note 6, at 10.

98

Id.

99

See, e.g., Maria Kayanan, Ending Florida's “Dirty Little Secret,” Florida Blog of Rights (Mar. 15, 2012), http://aclufl.wordpress.com/
page/3/.

100

Malika Saada Saar, Mothering as a Reproductive Right, RH Reality Check (Dec. 11, 2007, 10:18 AM), http://
www.rhrealitycheck.org/blog/2007/12/11/mothering-as-a-reproductive-right.

101

Kebby Warner, Pregnancy, Motherhood and Loss in Prison, in Interrupted Lives: The Experiences of Incarcerated Women in the
United States 90 (Paula Johnson et al. eds., 2010).

102

Carolyn Sufrin, End Practice of Shackling Pregnant Inmates, S.F. Chron. (Aug. 26, 2010), http://articles.sfgate.com/2010-08-26/
opinion/22235348_ 1_pregnant-inmates-pregnant-women-labor.

103

Sichel, supra note 15, at 226 (quoting Amnesty Int'l, supra note 95).

104

See infra Part II.

105

Jody Rapheal, Freeing Tammy: Women, Drugs, and Incarceration 42 (2007).

106

Butler, supra note 8, at 148 (quoting the 1891 pardon petition of Mrs. R. M. Lester, a Black woman convicted of adultery, to officials
of the Texas state prison system).

107

See Paula Giddings, When and Where I Enter: The Impact of Black Women on Race and Sex in America 34-39 (1996) (noting that
social constructions of Black women as lascivious, combined with their legal status as property, rendered Black women vulnerable
to sexual violence and reproductive subordination).

108

See, e.g., Oshinsky, supra note 19, at 20-21, 168-77 (describing the enactment of the Black Codes as a mechanism to reconstitute
the racial order previously maintained by slavery and noting that Black women were subject to criminalization under this regime);
Johnson, supra note 53, at 32-34 (noting that Black women disproportionately filled women's prisons in the post-Civil War South,
largely justified by “[n]egative racial stereotypes” of Black women as “captives of lesser morals and uncontrolled lust”). See generally
Alex Lichtenstein, Twice the Work of Free Labor (1996) (noting the expansion of chain gangs in the post-Civil War South).

109

Mullings, supra note 65, at 110-11.

110

Id.

111

Cheryl Harris, Whiteness as Property, 106 Harv. L. Rev. 1709, 1715-20 (1996).

112

Mullings, supra note 65, at 99-114.

113

See, e.g., Blackmon, supra note 9, at 53.

114

Haley, supra note 44.

115

See, e.g., Bernice D. Jones, Southern Free Women of Color in the Antebellum North: Race, Class and a “New Women's Legal
History,” 41 Akron L. Rev. 763, 772-73 (2008); Bonnie Thornton Dill, The Dialectics of Black Womanhood, 4 Signs 543 (1979)

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(noting the duality of Black women's identities and the separation from prevailing standards of femininity, largely defined by white
normative standards).

116

In suggesting that Black women have been masculinized, I do not mean to say, however, that masculinity or femininity are natural
categories. Rather, like race, gender binaries of male and female are not biological, but rather socially constructed. See Judith Butler,
Gender Trouble 25 (1990) ( “There is no gender identity behind the expressions of gender; that identity is performatively constituted
by the very ‘expressions' that are said to be its results.”). Moreover, as legal scholar Russell Robinson notes, “law does not simply
respond to preexisting, natural categories--man, woman, gay, straight. Rather, the law produces these categories and then creates the
illusion that they are innate and inevitable.” Russell K. Robinson, Masculinity as Prison: Sexuality, Race, and Incarceration, 99 Calif.
L. Rev. 1309, 1331 (2011). Gender is constructed through associations with the physical and the ideological, gender expressions, and
gender roles. See Ally Windsor Howell, A Comparison of the Treatment of Transgender Persons in the Criminal Justice Systems of
Ontario, Canada, New York, and California, 28 Buff. Pub. Int. L.J. 133, 207(2010) (providing a glossary of gender terms).

117

See bell hooks, Ain't I a Woman: Black Women and Feminism 22-23 (1981).

118

For a fuller discussion of this period see Dorothy Roberts, Killing the Black Body: Race, Reproduction, and the Meaning of Liberty
22-55 (1999) and Angela Y. Davis, Women, Race & Class 3-29 (1981).

119

See Davis, supra note 118, at 5-11.

120

Giddings, supra note 107, at 33-56.

121

Mullings, supra note 65, at 111.

122

Davis, supra note 118, at 5.

123

Mullings, supra note 65, at 111-13.

124

Id.; see also K. Sue Jewell, From Mammy to Miss America and Beyond: Cultural Images and the Shaping of U.S. Social Policy
55-56 (1993).

125

Id. at 112 (“In a model of femininity based on dependence as a defining characteristic, enslaved women became ‘defeminized'-excluded from the protections offered by womanhood, motherhood, and femininity.”)

126

Id.

127

See, e.g., Blackmon, supra note 9, at 53.

128

Id. at 85-86.

129

See id. at 64-69; Bailey v. Alabama, 219 U.S. 219, 227 (1911) (striking down Alabama's statute that provided for criminal penalties,
including the chain gang, for failure to perform under a contract in which an advance was paid).

130

See, e.g., Ruffin v. Commonwealth, 62 Va. (21 Gratt.) 790 (1871) (upholding the use of convict leasing); see also Wendy Imatani
Peloso, Les Miserables: Chain Gangs and the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause, 70 S. Cal. L. Rev. 1459, 1463-65 (1997);
Fierce, supra note 20, at 9.

131

Nicole Hahn Rafter, Women in State Prisons 1800-1935, at 133 (1985); Lichtenstein, supra note 108, at 195.

132

Loic Wacquant, From Slavery to Mass Incarceration: Rethinking the ‘Race Question’ in the U.S., 13 New Left Rev. 41, 53 (2002).

133

Id.

134

See, e.g., Haley, supra note 44, at 191.

135

Id. at 45.

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136

Mary Ellen Curtin, Black Prisoners and Their World, Alabama 1865-1900, at 6 (2000).

137

Haley, supra note 44, at 215.

138

See Oshinsky, supra note 19, at 169-70 (noting stereotypes of Black women as violent and dangerous served to justify their
disproportionate incarceration); Darlene Clark Hine, Lifting the Veil, Shattering the Silence: Black Women's History in Slavery and
Freedom, in Hine Sight: Black Women and the Re-construction of American History 14 (1997) (noting that constructs of Black
women as sexually promiscuous drove disproportionate arrest rates of Black women for prostitution).

139

See, e.g., Oshinsky, supra note 19, at 20-21, 32 (noting that Southern legislators rationalized the enactment of the Black Codes as a
mechanism for regulating the inherent moral degeneracy and criminality in the newly freed slaves); Roberts, supra note 21, at 1955-56.

140

Johnson, supra note 57, at 32 (“White women were systematically channeled out of prisons, while African American women were
systematically channeled into them.”); Haley, supra note 44, at 41-45; Rafter, supra note 131, at 143 (“Judges sometimes refused
outright to send white women to penal institutions. But to white officials, incarceration of a [B]lack woman was a matter of small
consequence.”).

141

Haley, supra note 44, at 170-85.

142

Id. at 175.

143

Id. at 97.

144

Crenshaw, supra note 23, at 158-59 (1989) (noting that reproductive capacities as the site of subordination for Black women is not
coincidental, as in the case of the rape of Black women during slavery, “[t]heir femaleness made them sexually vulnerable to racist
domination, while their Blackness effectively denied them any protection”).

145

See, e.g., Pamela D. Bridgewater, Un/Re/Dis Covering Slave Breeding in Thirteenth Amendment Jurisprudence, 7 Wash. & Lee
Race & Ethnic Anc. L.J. 11 (2001).

146

Harris, supra note 111, at 1716.

147

Dorothy Roberts, Racism and Patriarchy in the Meaning of Motherhood, 1 Am. U. J. Gender & L. 1, 7 (1993).

148

See Harris, supra note 111, at 1719 (discussing legislation that provided that children of Black women took on the status of the mother,
regardless of the status of the father, thus generating a financial incentive for the sexual violation of Black women); Davis, supra
note 118, at 7; Giddings, supra note 107, at 37; Erlene Stetson, Studying Slavery: Some Literary and Pedagogical Considerations on
the Black Female Slave, in But Some of Us Are Brave 74 (Gloria Hull et al. eds., 1982) (quoting an advertisement for the sale of
a female slave: “She is very prolific in her generating qualities, and affords a rare opportunity to any person who wishes to raise a
family of healthy servants for their own use”).

149

Crenshaw, supra note 23, at 158-59.

150

See Patricia Hill Collins, Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment 81 (2000) (noting
that the image of the Black woman as a “jezebel originated under slavery when Black women were portrayed as ... ‘sexually aggressive
wet nurses.’ Jezebel's function was to relegate all Black women to the category of sexually aggressive women, thus providing a
powerful rationale for the widespread sexual assaults by White men typically reported by Black slave women”).

151

See Giddings, supra note 107, at 37.

152

See Hannah Rosen, Terror in the Heart of Freedom: Citizenship, Sexual Violence, and the Meaning of Race in the Postemancipation
South 10 (2009) (“Antebellum southern state law depicted enslaved women as both incapable of consent--because, as slaves, they
had no will or honor of their own--and simultaneously as always consenting to sex; in other words, the law represented enslaved
women as lacking the will and honor to refuse consent.”).

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153

Id.; see also Stetson, supra note 148, at 73-74 (noting popular images of Black women as “female animals,” “especially passionate”
and thus well positioned to be “breeder[s]”).

154

Hine, supra note 138, at 14.

155

Id.

156

Id.

157

See Blackmon, supra note 9, at 146 (“[B]lack women faced the double jeopardy of being required to submit both to the cotton fields
and kitchens, as well as the beds of the white men obtaining them.”).

158

See, e.g., Haley, supra note 44, at 146-63; Oshinsky, supra note 19, at 172.

159

See Haley, supra note 44, at 146-63 (exploring the history of rape in Georgia prisons during the Jim Crow era).

160

See, e.g., Butler, supra note 8, at 137-38, 140; Curtin, supra note 136, at 124.

161

Johnson, supra note 57, at 32.

162

Id. at 83. This is not to say, however, that white women were not punished at all. Under the patriarchal norms that prevailed during
this period, women were deemed the property of their husbands and therefore subject to their authority within the context of the
home. See, e.g., Angela Y. Davis, Public Imprisonment and Private Violence: Reflections on the Hidden Punishment of Women, 24
New Eng. J. Crim. & Civ. Confinement 339 (1998). White women experienced significant discipline and punishment through the
imposition of violence at the hands of their husbands in these “private” spaces. Id. Thus, the prison served as a racialized boundary
between the public and private punishment of women.
Moreover, while notions of patriarchy and womanhood largely insulated white women from criminalization and incarceration, there
were occasions (such as open cohabitation with black men) under which they were subject to punishment within the harsh regimes of
convict leasing or chain gangs. See Curtin, supra note 136, at 115. In the event that white women were incarcerated, it was often for
a separate class of crimes, which was viewed as degrading to their race and femininity and thus threatening to the prevailing racial
order. Id. In Black Prisoners and Their World, Mary Ellen Curtin notes that white women held in Alabama prisons were often sent
there for traversing sexual mores of the time with respect to interracial relationships: “In 1882 four out of the five white female state
prisoners had been found guilty of adultery, a crime which implied interracial sex.” Id. at 114. Such conduct on the part of white
women stripped them of “their racial privilege.” Id. at 115. White women in Alabama with this class of conviction were housed with
Black women until the interracial housing arrangement raised concerns about whether white women could ever be “cured of [their]
disease” if they were subject to the corrupting influence of Black women. Id. at 114. Thus, even in moments when white women
were punished, the prison actively functioned to define and maintain racial and gender boundaries.

163

Id. at 85.

164

Davis, supra note 118, at 8-9.

165

Id. at 9.

166

Id.

167

Id.

168

Id. at 8.

169

See Roberts, supra note 118, at 36-37.

170

Id. at 34-35; see also Orlando Patterson, Slavery and Social Death: A Comparative Study 5 (1982) (identifying “natal alienation”-the separation from past, present, and future generations--as a central aspect of slavery).

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171

Darlene Clark Hine, Female Slave Resistance: The Economics of Sex, in Hine Sight: Black Women and the Re-construction of
American History 30-31 (1997).

172

Id.

173

Id. at 31.

174

See, e.g., April L. Cherry, Nurturing in the Service of White Culture: Racial Subordination, Gestational Surrogacy, and the Ideology
of Motherhood, 10 Tex. J. Women & L. 83, 93 (2001) (noting that there are “both structure[s] and ideolog[ies] that require motherhood
as a prerequisite for all socially acceptable female adult roles”).

175

See, e.g., Butler, supra note 8, at 164-68; Haley, supra note 44, at 100-03.

176

See, e.g., Oshinsky, supra note 19, at 46-47 (describing the high mortality rates in convict leasing camps).

177

See, e.g., Haley, supra note 44, at 100-02.

178

Id.

179

Id. at 102.

180

Id.

181

Butler, supra note 8, at 136.

182

Id. at 168.

183

Haley, supra note 44, at 81.

184

Id.

185

Id. at 163.

186

Beverly Guy-Sehftall, Daughters of Sorrow: Attitudes Toward Black Women, 1880-1920, at 136 (1990).

187

Hine, supra note 138, at 13.

188

Oshinsky, supra note 19, at 169.

189

See, e.g., Crystal N. Feimster, Southern Horrors: Women and the Politics of Rape and Lynching 103 (2009) (referring to “the rape/
lynch narrative [that] depended on a variety of racialized gender constructions: the chaste and dependent white woman; the sexually
violent black man; the immoral and unredeemable black woman; and the honorable and civilized white man”); Carrie E. Johnson,
Book Note, Policy and Prejudice, 10 Berkeley Women's L.J. 134, 140-42 (1995) (reviewing Jill Quadango, The Color of Welfare:
How Racism Undermined the War on Poverty (1994)) (listing the various ways in which Black Americans were discriminated against
during the middle of the twentieth century).

190

See generally Feimster, supra note 189 (arguing that the sexual victimization of Black women was an essential part of white
subordination of Blacks).

191

See, e.g., Mary Frances Berry, Black Resistance, White Law 97-107 (1994).

192

Alexander, supra note 21, at 86.

193

U.S. Dep't of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics, 1997 (1998).

194

See, e.g.,Wacquant, supra note 132, at 41-50; Alexander, supra note 21, at 176-95.

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195

See, e.g., Vesla M. Weaver, Frontlash: Race and the Development of Putative Crime Policy, 21 Stud. Am. Pol. Dev. 230 (2007);
Katherine Beckett, Making Crime Pay: Law and Order in Contemporary American Politics (1997).

196

See, e.g., C. Vann Woodward, The Strange Career of Jim Crow 8-10 (1974).

197

See generally Weaver, supra note 195, at 230; Beckett, supra note 195.

198

Lynch, supra note 28, at 9.

199

Id. at 208.

200

Id. at 211-13.

201

See, e.g., Marc Mauer, Race to Incarcerate 23-34 (2006); Bruce Western, Punishment and Inequality in America 34-51 (2005).

202

Bobo & Thompson, supra note 49, at 336-41.

203

See, e.g., Sherri Sharma, Beyond “Driving While Black” and “Flying While Brown”: Using Intersectionality to Uncover the Gendered
Aspects of Racial Profiling, 12 Colum. J. Gender & L. 275, 287-93 (2003); Dorothy E. Roberts, Unshackling Black Motherhood,
95 Mich. L. Rev. 938, 949-52 (1997); Wahneema Lubiano, Black Ladies, Welfare Queens, and State Minstrels: Ideological War by
Narrative Means, in Race-ing Justice, En-gendering Power: Essays on Anita Hill, Clarence Thomas, and the Construction of Social
Reality 323, 332-33 (Toni Morrison ed., 1992).

204

See, e.g., Natalie Sokoloff, The Effects of the Prison Industrial Complex on African American Women, in Racializing Justice,
Disenfranchising Lives: The Racism, Criminal Justice, and the Law Reader 74 (Manning Marable ed., 2007).

205

See generally Marc Mauer et al., Gender and Justice: Women, Drugs, and Sentencing Policy (1999), available at http://
www.sentencingproject.org/doc/File/Drug%20Policy/dp_genderandjustice.pdf.

206

Bobo & Thompson, supra note 49, at 325-28.

207

Lynch, supra note 28, at 9.

208

Id.

209

See, e.g., The Pew Ctr. on the States, One in 100: Behind Bars in America 2008, at 5 (2008), available at http://
www.pewcenteronthestates.org/uploadedFiles/8015PCTS_Prison08_FINAL_2-1-1_ FORWEB.pdf (noting that the United States
has the highest incarceration rate in the world).

210

West, supra note 51, at 7, 20.

211

Mullings, supra note 65, at 118. Shaylor, supra note 70, at 394 (“A central function of prisons in general is to punish women who
fail to subscribe to a model of femininity that historically has been (re)produced in discourse as white, pure, passive, heterosexual,
and located in motherhood.”).

212

Mullings, supra note 65, at 118 (noting that Black women's disproportionate incarceration “may simply reflect society's view that
they are in greater need of demasculinization”).

213

Lynch, supra note 28, at 13 (noting the relationship between the change in the size and racial composition of jails and prisons and
shifts in the purpose of incarceration).

214

See Phillip A. Goff et al., “Ain't I a Woman”: Towards an Intersectional Approach to Person Perception and Group-Based Harms,
59 Sex Roles 392-403 (2008) (arguing there is a strong association between “Blackness” and masculinity); Buchannan, Impunity,
supra note 69, at 53 (noting stereotypes of Black women as criminal and violent); Rafter, supra note 131, at 143 (noting the link
between stereotypes of Black women as masculine and Black women's incarceration rates); Kali N. Gross, Colored Amazons: Crime,
Violence, and Black Women in the City of Brotherly Love, 1880-1910, at 101-26 (2006); see generally Nell Irvin Painter, Hill,

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Thomas, and the Use of Racial Stereotype, in Race-ing Justice, En-gendering Power 200, 209-13 (Toni Morrison ed., 1992) (noting
stereotypes of Black women as aggressive and sexually promiscuous).

215

Johnson, supra note 57, at 31 (“[I]ncreasing numbers of African American women garnered less compassion than the previous, largely
White inmate populations.”).

216

Craig Haney, Riding the Punishment Wave: On the Origins of Our Devolving Standards of Decency, 9 Hastings Women's L.J. 27,
55-59 (1998) (noting the repudiation of the rehabilitative goal of the criminal justice system); see also Joan Petersilia, When Prisoners
Come Home 5-8 (2003) (noting the defunding of educational, therapeutic, and vocational programs in prisons).

217

See Jesenia M. Pizarro et al., Supermax Prisons: Myths, Realities, and the Politics of Punishment in American Society, 17 Crim.
Just. Pol'y Rev. 6, 13 (2006) (noting “the advent of the supermax institution in the 1980s”); Roy D. King, The Rise and Rise of
Supermax: An American Solution in Search of a Problem?, 1 Punishment & Soc'y 163, 175 (1999) (listing states with supermaximum
prison beds in 1997 and 1998); Lynch, supra note 28, at 135-38 (describing early construction of supermaximum units in Arizona
in the late 1980s).

218

Lynch, supra note 28, at 7.

219

Id. at 3.

220

Katherine Beckett & Naomi Murakawa, The Penology of Racial Innocence: The Erasure of Racism in the Study and Practice of
Punishment, 44 Law & Soc'y Rev. 695, 696 (2010) (collection of studies regarding society's hostility toward people of color and its
willingness to punish harshly if people of color are presumed to be the subject of punishment).

221

See Ange Marie Hancock, The Politics of Disgust and the Public Identity of the “Welfare Queen” 1-22 (2004).

222

Collins, supra note 150, at 72.

223

U.S. Const. amend. VIII.

224

Dolovich, supra note 33, at 897.

225

481 U.S. 279, 283-84 (1987).

226

Id. at 286.

227

Id. at 287.

228

Id.

229

Id.

230

Id. at 299-301.

231

Id. at 301-08.

232

Id. at 296-97.

233

Id. at 309 (“McCleskey asks us to accept the likelihood allegedly shown by the Baldus study as the constitutional measure of an
unacceptable risk of racial prejudice influencing capital sentencing decisions. This we decline to do.”).

234

Beckett & Murakawa, supra note 220 (coining the term “penology of racial innocence” and defining it as “the study of punishment
that obscures the operation of racial power in penal practices and institutions”).

235

Id.

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236

See Estelle v. Gamble, 429 U.S. 97, 103 (1976) (“An inmate must rely on prison authorities to treat his medical needs; if the authorities
fail to do so, those needs will not be met. In the worst cases, such a failure may actually produce physical ‘torture or a lingering
death,’ the evils of most immediate concern to the drafters of the Amendment.”) (citations omitted).

237

Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 832 (1994).

238

Estelle, 429 U.S. at 102.

239

Id.

240

Id. at 104-05; see also Rhodes v. Chapman, 452 U.S. 337, 347 (1981) (holding that the conditions of confinement could constitute
cruel and unusual punishment).

241

Estelle, 429 U.S. at 106.

242

Id.

243

See Wilson v. Seiter, 501 U.S. 294, 297-301 (1991).

244

Id. at 296-97, 300.

245

Id. at 299; see also Helling v. McKinney, 509 U.S. 25 (1993) (finding that the Eighth Amendment applies to conditions of confinement
that pose a substantial risk of future harm to inmate health or safety).

246

Wilson, 501 U.S. at 300.

247

Id.

248

Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 835-45 (1994).

249

Id. at 834.

250

Id.

251

Id. at 835.

252

Id. at 837.

253

Id. at 838. See also Wilson v. Seiter, 501 U.S. 294, 299-302 (1991) (rejecting a reading of the Eighth Amendment which would have
allowed liability based on objectively inhumane prison conditions).

254

Wilson, 501 U.S. at 306 (White, J., concurring).

255

Id. at 311.

256

The perpetrator perspective, which is useful in this context, has been described in the context of antidiscrimination law as “racial
discrimination not as conditions, but as actions, or series of actions, inflicted on the victim by the perpetrator. The focus is more
on what particular perpetrators have done or are doing to some victims than it is on the overall life situation of the victim class.”
Alan David Freeman, Legitimizing Racial Discrimination Through Antidiscrimination Law: A Critical Review of Supreme Court
Doctrine, 62 Minn. L. Rev. 1049, 1052-57 (1978).

257

Farmer, 511 U.S. at 854-55; see also id. at 856-57 (“A punishment is simply no less cruel or unusual because its harm is unintended.”).

258

Wilson, 501 U.S. at 310 (White, J., concurring).

259

Beckett & Murakawa, supra note 220, at 701.

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260

See, e.g., Johnson v. California, 543 U.S. 499 (2005) (applying strict scrutiny to the race-based cell assignment policies in California
state prisons under the Equal Protection Clause); McCleskey v. Kemp, 481 U.S. 279 (1987) (rejecting a challenge to the racially
discriminatory application of the death penalty, despite significant evidence of racial disproportionality).

261

Nelson v. Corr. Med. Servs. (Nelson II), 583 F.3d 522 (8th Cir. 2009).

262

Id. at 524-25; Nelson v. Corr. Med. Servs. (Nelson I), 533 F.3d 958, 961 (8th Cir. 2008), vacated, 583 F.3d 552 (8th Cir. 2009).

263

Nelson II, 583 F.3d at 524-25.

264

Id.

265

Id.

266

Id. at 526.

267

Id.

268

Nelson I,533 F.3d 958, 962-63(8th Cir. 2008).

269

Id. at 962 (quoting Estelle v. Gamble, 429 U.S. 97, 104 (1976)).

270

Id. at 962-63.

271

Id. at 963 (quoting Haslar v. Megerman, 104 F.3d 178, 180 (8th Cir. 1997)).

272

See Nelson II, 583 F.3d 522, 533 (8th Cir. 2009).

273

Id. at 529-30.

274

Id. at 534-36.

275

See Andrea Hsu, Transcript: Difficult Births: Laboring and Delivering in Shackles, Nat'l Pub. Radio, (July 16, 2010), http://
www.npr.org/templates/transcript/transcript.php?storyId=128563037 (“[A] jury in Arkansas found that a guard had violated the
constitutional rights of a woman by shackling her in labor. The jurors awarded her one dollar.”).

276

See Martha Chamallas & Jennifer B. Wriggins, The Measure of Injury: Race, Gender, and Tort Law 156 (2010) (noting that “not
unlike sentences meted out in criminal cases, tort measurements of lost earnings potential, pain and suffering, and other types of
damages can be affected by negative attitudes toward social groups and are not immune to conscious and unconscious gender and
race bias”); Buchanan, Impunity, supra note 69, at 70 (highlighting Morris v. Eversley, a case wherein a “jury convicted a guard of
sexually assaulting a female prisoner based on DNA evidence. A civil jury awarded the prisoner only $500 in compensatory damages
and $7,500 in punitive damages”); Margo Schlanger, Inmate Litigation, 116 Harv. L. Rev. 1555, 1622 (2003) (noting that juries are
more likely to “lowball prisoners' nonwage damages as an expression of disregard for them”). Cf. McMillan v. City of New York, 253
F.R.D. 247 (E.D.N.Y. 2008) (rejecting the use of race in tort damage determinations, which causes depressed recovery for plaintiffs
of color, as a violation of equal protection and due process).

277

See 712 F. Supp. 2d 1208, 1211 (W.D. Wash. 2010).

278

Id. at 1211-12. But see id. at 1212 (noting that the defendant denied applying waist restraints on plaintiff during transport to the
hospital).

279

See id. at 1213.

280

Id. at 1213-14.

281

Id. at 1214.

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282

See id.

283

See id.

284

See id.

285

See, e.g., Elizabeth Alexander, Ending the Inhumane Practice of Shackling Prisoners During Childbirth, ACLU (Oct. 30, 2009,
2:10 PM), http:// www.aclu.org/blog/prisoners-rights-reproductive-freedom/ending-inhumane-practice-shackling-prisoners-during;
NOW Calls for End to Shackling of Pregnant Incarcerated Women, Nat'l Org. for Women, http://www.now.org/nnt/spring-2010/
shackling.html (last visited July 14, 2012).

286

See Nelson II, 583 F.3d 522, 535-36 (8th Cir. 2009).

287

See Alice Ristroph, Sexual Punishments, 15 Colum. J. Gender & L. 139, 171 (2006) (“Legal scholars and philosophers may be partly
to blame for this gulf between the legal conceptions of punishment and the reality of penal practices. In striving to legitimate state
punishment and distinguish it from violence, they have carefully defined away the reality of penal practices.”).

288

See Hudson v. McMillan, 503 U.S. 1, 9-10 (1992) (holding that a prisoner must suffer at least de minimis injury to state a claim for
cruel and unusual punishment as a result of mistreatment in prison).

289

Inside This Place, Not of It: Narratives from Women's Prisons, supra note 3, at 37 (relating Olivia Hamilton's prison experience that
“[b]eing shackled, being forced to have that c-section ... was the worst feeling, mentally and emotionally”).

290

U.S. Jails ‘Shackle Pregnant Women’, BBC News (Mar. 2, 2006, 1:41 PM), http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4766218.stm.

291

Liptak, supra note 61.

292

Id.

293

Heather Rice, Giving Birth in Chains, Roanoke Times, Feb. 14, 2011, http://www.roanoke.com/editorials/commentary/wb/276951.

294

Id.

295

Cal. Penal Code §§ 5007.7, 6030(f) (West 2011).

296

Id.

297

See, e.g., Shain, supra note 63.

298

Id.

299

See Karen Shain, Governor Vetoes Bill to Ban Shackling of Pregnant Inmates, S.F. Chron. (Sept. 28, 2010), http://www.sfgate.com/
cgi-bin/blogs/opinionshop/detail?entry_id=73370.

300

Amnesty Int'l USA, supra note 6, at 11.

301

Id. (“While inducing labor she was put into handcuffs. They took the handcuffs when the baby was about to be born. After the baby
was born she was shackled in the recovery room. She was shackled while she held the baby. Had to walk with shackles when she
went to the baby. She asked the officer to hold the baby when she went to pick something up. The officer said it was against the rules.
She had to manoeuvre with the shackles and the baby to pick up the item. In the room she had a civilian roommate and the roommate
had visitors and she had to cover the shackles .... She said she was traumatized and humiliated by the shackles. She was shackled
when she saw her baby in the hospital nursery (a long distance from the room). Passing visitors were staring and making remarks.
She was shackled when she took a shower; only one time when she was not.”).

302

See, e.g., Zaborowski v. Sheriff of Cook Cnty., No. 08 C 6946, 2010 WL 5463065 (N.D. Ill. Dec. 29, 2010) (denying motion to
dismiss complaint challenging the constitutionality of the practice of shackling women during labor and delivery in Cook County

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women's jails); Colleen Mastony, Childbirth in Chains, Chi. Trib., July 18, 2010, http:// articles.chicagotribune.com/2010-07-18/
news/ct-met-shackled-mothers-20100718_1_ shackles-handcuffs-labor/4.

303

See Mastony, supra note 302.

304

See, e.g., Jennifer L. Eberhart et al., Seeing Black: Race, Crime and Visual Processing, 87 J. Personality & Soc. Psychol. 876-93
(2004); Jerry Kang, Trojan Horses of Race, 118 Harv. L. Rev. 1489, 1498-1528 (2005).

305

Phyllis Wheatley, Letter to Rev. Samson Occum, Conn. Gazette, Feb. 11, 1774.

306

I am not alone in critiquing the intent-based, individualized focus of contemporary Eighth Amendment jurisprudence. Eighth
Amendment scholars such as Thomas Landry and Alice Ristroph have critiqued Eighth Amendment conditions of confinement as
insufficiently institutional in scope. See, e.g., Ristroph, supra note 33, at 1353 (arguing that an intent-based theory of punishment is
inappropriate in the Eighth Amendment context and calling for a more objective approach to punishment, including specified factors
to assist courts in defining what constitutes cruelty for purposes of the Eighth Amendment); Ristroph, supra note 287, at 167-68
(“[P]arsing of the concept of punishment is arbitrary and incoherent. Contemporary punishment is a complex set of practices carried
out by a number of official actors and institutions. The use of official intent to circumscribe the category of ‘punishment’ ... denies
both the complexity of punishment and its status as a set of practices.”); James J. Park, Redefining Eighth Amendment Punishments:
A New Standard for Determining the Liability of Prison Officials for Failing to Protect Inmates from Serious Harm, 20 Quinnipiac
L. Rev. 407, 409 (2001) (critiquing the “knowledge requirement” in Eighth Amendment jurisprudence and arguing that “prison
official[s] should be liable for objectively serious harms suffered by a prisoner caused by the prison official's failure to take reasonable
precautions to protect the prisoner from risks of serious harm that are discoverable with reasonable care”); Thomas K. Landry,
‘‘Punishment” and the Eighth Amendment, 57 Ohio St. L.J. 1607, 1610-11 (1996) (proposing a “governmentalist” definition of
punishment, which includes “those conditions or events in prison that are attributable to the punitive intent of the government in its role
as monopolist over the machinery of punishment. In doctrinal terms, this definition entails three elements: (1) a penalty, (2) inflicted
for criminal conduct, (3) pursuant to regular processes of governmental administration and thus attributable to the government in its
role as monopolist over punishment”); Melvin Gutterman, The Contours of Eighth Amendment Prison Jurisprudence: Conditions of
Confinement, 48 SMU L. Rev. 373, 395-99 (1995) (critiquing the “deliberate indifference standard” in the context of conditions of
confinement and suggesting that the Court has “yielded too much to federalism and deference toward prison officials by placing too
formidable a barrier in the path of prison reform”); Russell W. Gray, Wilson v. Seiter: Defining the Components of and Proposing
a Direction for Eighth Amendment Prison Condition Law, 41 Am. U. L. Rev. 1339, 1386-87 (1992) (critiquing the Court's ruling
in Wilson v. Seiter and arguing for a modified intent standard in Eighth Amendment jurisprudence). But see Richard D. Nobleman,
Wilson v. Seiter: Prison Conditions and the Eighth Amendment Standard, 24 Pac. L.J. 275, 309 (1992) (arguing that “common sense
rebels against the notion that prison conditions are intended to be punishment” and suggesting that an objective standard in conditions
of confinement would create “uncertainty in prison litigation”).

307

Dolovich, supra note 33, at 907.

308

131 S. Ct. 1910 (2011).

309

Under the Prisoner Litigation Reform Act, prior to the issuance of a population reduction order, a three-judge panel must determine
that “crowding is the primary cause of the violation of a Federal right.” 18 U.S.C. § 3626(a)(3)(E)(i) (2006).

310

Brown, 131 S. Ct. at 1923.

311

Id. at 1928-29 (“Courts nevertheless must not shrink from their obligation to ‘enforce the constitutional rights of all ‘persons,’
including prisoners.' Courts may not allow constitutional violations to continue simply because a remedy would involve intrusion
into the realm of prison administration.”) (citation omitted).

312

See, e.g., Parents Involved in Comm. Sch. v. Seattle Sch. Dist. No. 1, 551 U.S. 701 (2007); Grutter v. Bollinger, 539 U.S. 306 (2003).

313

See Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Remarks on Writing Separately, 65 Wash. L. Rev. 133, 144 (1990) (quoting Charles Hughes, The Supreme
Court of the United States 68 (1936)).

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314

See U.S. Const. amend. XIII, § 2; U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 5.

315

See, e.g., Anna Stolley Persky, North Carolina's Death Row Inmates Let Statistics Back Up Bias Claims, ABA J. (May 1, 2011,
3:00 AM), http:// www.abajournal.com/magazine/article/north_carolinas_death_row_inmates_let_ statistics_back_up_bias_claims/
(describing North Carolina's Racial Justice Act).

316

See Angela Y. Davis, Are Prisons Obsolete? 25 (2003).

317

See Roberts, supra note 18, at 1454.

318

Id.

319

452 U.S. 337 (1981).

320

Id. at 347 (noting that Eighth Amendment “principles apply when the conditions of confinement compose the punishment at issue”);
see also Hutto v. Finny, 437 U.S. 678, 685 (1978) (“Confinement in a prison or in an isolation cell is a form of punishment subject
to scrutiny under Eighth Amendment standards.”).

321

Rhodes, 452 U.S. at 347.

322

Id.

323

Dolovich, supra note 33, at 907; see also Ristroph, supra note 306, at 169 (“When a person is sentenced to prison as criminal
punishment, the standard and foreseeable conditions of incarceration are part of that punishment.”).

324

Wilson v. Seiter, 501 U.S. 294, 310 (1991) (White, J., concurring) (“Inhumane prison conditions often are the result of cumulative
actions and inactions by numerous officials inside and outside a prison,” and “intent simply is not very meaningful when considering
a challenge to an institution, such as a prison system.”).

325

This is not to say, however, that the question of intent would be entirely absent in considering the liability of high-ranking officers and
officials. In the context of § 1983 actions, the primary statutory vehicle for the vindication of constitutional rights, the Supreme Court
has required a heightened awareness standard for supervisory liability. See, e.g., Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 129 S. Ct. 1937, 1948-50 (2009);
Monell v. New York City Dept. of Soc. Servs., 436 U.S. 658, 691 (1978). The question of supervisory liability pursuant to § 1983,
however, is a separate inquiry from the means by which a litigant can secure institutional relief based on constitutional standards.

326

See Dolovich, supra note 33, at 907.

327

Trop v. Dulles, 356 U.S. 86 (1958).

328

Id. at 100.

329

Rhodes v. Chapman, 452 U.S. 337, 346 (1981) (quoting Trop, 356 U.S. at 101).

330

Weems v. United States, 217 U.S. 349, 378 (1910).

331

Rhodes, 452 U.S. at 346.

332

Id.

333

Id. at 347.

334

See Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.S. 153, 173 (1976).

335

See, e.g., Akhil Reed Amar, The Case of the Missing Amendments: R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul, 106 Harv. L. Rev. 124, 125-26, 155-60
(1992) (arguing that First Amendment challenges to ordinances or statutes prohibiting hate speech should be analyzed in light of the

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Thirteenth Amendment). The Court's recognition that the Eighth Amendment is an evolving provision makes it even more suitable
for illumination based on the development of subsequent constitutional developments.

336

See supra notes 279-84. That dignity is at the heart of the Eighth Amendment's cruel and unusual punishment clause is significant
given the role that degradation, in many ways the opposite of dignity, plays in facilitating harsh conditions of confinement. James
Whitman argues that to understand American punishment, we must understand the relationship between “social hierarchy and the
dynamic of degradation in punishment.” James Whitman, Harsh Justice: Criminal Punishment and the Widening Divide Between
America and Europe 7 (2003) (emphasis omitted). In particular, he argues that “[t]he susceptibility to degradation lies at the core of
what makes American punishment harsh. And our susceptibility to degradation has to do precisely with our lack of an ‘aristocratic
element.”’ Id.

337

Brown v. Plata, 131 S. Ct. 1910, 1928 (2011).

338

408 U.S. 238 (1972) (per curiam).

339

Id. at 255 (Douglas, J., concurring).

340

Id. at 257.

341

McCleskey v. Kemp, 481 U.S. 279, 321 (1987) (Brennan, J., dissenting).

342

Id. at 328.

343

Id. at 329-30.

344

See id. at 330.

345

Id. at 329.

346

Id. at 344.

347

Id.

348

See, e.g., Kamal Ghali, No Slavery Except as Punishment for Crime: The Punishment Clause and Sexual Slavery, 55 UCLA L.
Rev. 607, 638-41 (2008) (arguing for a modified intent-based reading of the punishment clause and the application of the Thirteenth
Amendment to the prison context to prohibit sexual slavery); William M. Carter, Jr., A Thirteenth Amendment Framework for
Combating Racial Profiling, 39 Harv. C.R.-C.L. L. Rev. 17, 17 (2009) (arguing that the “use of race as a proxy for criminality is ...
a badge and incident of slavery in violation of the Thirteenth Amendment”). Given that I am not arguing for an independent cause
of action arising out of the Thirteenth Amendment, there is no need for intratextual analysis of the word “punishment” in the Eighth
and Thirteenth Amendments. See Akhil Reed Amar, Intratextualism, 112 Harv. L. Rev. 747, 748 (1999) (positing an approach to
constitutional interpretation whereby “the interpreter tries to read a contested word or phrase that appears in the Constitution in light
of another passage in the Constitution featuring the same (or a very similar) word or phrase”).

349

Alexander Tsesis, Interpreting the Thirteenth Amendment, 11 Pa. J. Const. L. 1337, 1337-38 (2009).

350

See Alexander Tsesis, A Civil Rights Approach: Achieving Revolutionary Abolitionism Through the Thirteenth Amendment, 39
U.C. Davis L. Rev. 1773, 1811 (2006) (“If ‘freedom’ was to mean nothing more than liberation from shackles, Representative and
future president James A. Garfield pointed out in 1865, then it would be ‘a bitter mockery’ and ‘a cruel delusion.”’); Jack M. Balkin
& Sanford Levinson, The Dangerous Thirteenth Amendment, Colum. L. Rev. (forthcoming 2012) (manuscript at 105), available at
http:// ssrn.com/abstract=2115222 (arguing that the word “slavery” as used at the time of the drafting of the Thirteenth Amendment
had a much broader meaning than “chattel slavery” and included “illegitimate domination, political subordination and the absence
of republican government”).

351

Cong. Globe, 38th Cong., 1st Sess. 1319, 1321, 1324 (1864).

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352

Jacobus tenBroek, Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States: Consummation to Abolition and Key to the
Fourteenth Amendment, 39 Calif. L. Rev. 171, 177-78 (1951) (citing Cong. Globe, 38th Cong., 1st Sess. 1439, 1440 (1864)); id.
at 202 (stating that “[the meaning of the Thirteenth Amendment] is to be gathered from the comprehensive goals of the abolitionist
crusade”).

353

Peggy Cooper Davis, Contested Images of Family Values: The Role of the State, 107 Harv. L. Rev. 1348, 1349 (1993); see also Peggy
Cooper Davis, Neglected Stories: The Constitution and Family Values 83-109 (1997) (noting that the Reconstruction Amendments
are grounded in “antislavery traditions of human dignity and family liberty”).

354

See Risa L. Goluboff, The Thirteenth Amendment in Historical Perspective, 11 U. Pa. J. Const. L. 1451 (2008).

355

Pamela D. Bridgewater, Reproductive Freedom as Civil Freedom: The Thirteenth Amendment's Role in the Struggle for Reproductive
Rights, 3 J. Gender, Race & Just. 401 (2000).

356

83 U.S. 36, 69 (1873).

357

109 U.S. 3, 28 (1883).

358

83 U.S. 36, 71 (1873) (rejecting the argument that a state-created monopoly circumscribed the right to choose a vocation in violation
of the Thirteenth Amendment).

359

Civil Rights Cases, 109 U.S. at 20-23 (holding that the Thirteenth Amendment did not authorize Congress to regulate private
discrimination, which it did not regard as a badge or incident of slavery).

360

See 163 U.S. 537 (1896).

361

U.S. Const. amend. XIII, § 1.

362

See, e.g., United States v. Reynolds, 235 U.S. 133, 150 (1914) (holding that an Alabama peonage statute operated in violation of
the Thirteenth Amendment and federal law promulgated under the authority granted by the Thirteenth Amendment). See generally
Blackmon, supra note 9 (describing the expansive reach of the criminal law and the use of crime as a means to control newly freed
slaves under the Black Codes).

363

Id. at 542-43.

364

Civil Rights Cases, 109 U.S. at 26 (Harlan, J., dissenting).

365

Id.

366

Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537, 555-58 (1896) (Harlan, J., dissenting).

367

Id.

368

219 U.S. 219 (1911).

369

Id. at 227; see also Cylatt v. United States, 107 U.S. 207, 207 (1905) (upholding the Anti-Peonage Act, which prohibited the
punishment of individuals for failure to perform a labor contract); Rebecca E. Zietlow, Free at Last! Antisubordination and the
Thirteenth Amendment, 90 B.U. L. Rev. 255, 292-93 (2010); Andrew Koppelman, Forced Labor: A Thirteenth Amendment Defense
of Abortion, 84 Nw. U. L. Rev. 480, 490 (1990) (arguing that Bailey v. Alabama represents “[t]he seminal case construing the selfexecuting force of the thirteenth amendment”).

370

Bailey, 219 U.S. at 241.

371

Id. at 244.

372

Id. at 231 (“We at once dismiss from consideration the fact that the plaintiff in error is a black man.”).

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373

392 U.S. 409, 409 (1968).

374

Id. at 440; see also Tillman v. Wheaton-Haven Recreation Ass'n, 410 U.S. 431 (1973) (private swimming club's racially discriminatory
admissions policies violated 42 U.S.C. § 1981, a statute enacted pursuant to Congress's Section 2 authority under the Thirteenth
Amendment); Runyon v. McCrary, 427 U.S. 160, 160-62 (1970) (finding the Thirteenth Amendment authorized Congress to enact
legislation to prohibit discrimination in private educational institutions); Johnson v. Ry. Express, 421 U.S. 454 (1975) (concluding
that a lawsuit filed pursuant to section 1981, a statute enacted under congressional authority granted by the Thirteenth Amendment,
is allowable against a private employer).

375

While the Jones Court did not address whether the judiciary had any role in enforcing the Thirteenth Amendment, judges at the
appellate level have raised the possibility. In Williams v. City of New Orleans, for example, Judge Wisdom, writing for himself
and five other judges in dissent, noted that “[w]hen a present discriminatory effect upon blacks as a class can be linked with a
discriminatory practice against blacks as a race under the slavery system, the present effect may be eradicated under the auspices
of the Thirteenth amendment.” Williams v. City of New Orleans,729 F.2d 1554, 1577(5th Cir. 1984) (Wisdom, J., dissenting).
Consequently, Judge Wisdom argued that an affirmative action program was constitutional under the Thirteenth Amendment. See
id. at 1578. In City of Memphis v. Greene, 451 U.S. 100, 128 (1981), the Court undertook an analysis to determine whether a wall
between a black and white neighborhood constituted a badge or incident of slavery. See also Douglas L. Colbert, Liberating the
Thirteenth Amendment, 30 Harv. C.R.-C.L. L. Rev. 1, 2-4 (1995).

376

See Koppelman, supra note 369, at 496.

377

Williams, 729 F.2d at 1577 (Wisdom, J., dissenting); see also George Rutherglen, State Action, Private Action, and the Thirteenth
Amendment, 94 Va. L. Rev. 1367, 1396-97 (2008) (“The badges and incidents of slavery are intermediate in both a conceptual and
an instrumental sense. Conceptually, they constitute the components of slavery; instrumentally, eliminating them one-by-one serves
the ultimate goal of eradicating slavery itself.”).

378

Planned Parenthood of Se. Pa. v. Casey, 505 U.S. 833, 851 (1992).

379

Campbell v. Wood, 18 F.3d 662, 702 (9th Cir. 1994) (Reinhardt, J., dissenting).

380

Id. at 701-02.

381

Charles R. Lawrence III, The Id, the Ego, and Equal Protection: Reckoning with Unconscious Racism, 39 Stan. L. Rev. 317, 356
(1987); see also Jerry Kang, Negative Action Against Asian Americans: The Internal Instability of Dworkin's Defense of Affirmative
Action, 31 Harv. C.R.-C.L. L. Rev. 1, 21-22 (1996) (articulating a vision of antidiscrimination that “focuses less on whether the state
actor holds or credits prejudiced beliefs and more on whether the state action reinforces a system of racial subjugation or caste”).

382

Jones v. Alfred H. Mayer Co., 392 U.S. 409, 440 (1968).

383

Id. at 438-39.

384

See supra Part II.

385

See, e.g., Shaylor, supra note 70, at 394-96; Chandler, supra note 80, at 5-6.

386

Camille Gear Rich, Marginal Whiteness, 98 Calif. L. Rev. 1497 (2010).

387

Id. at 1539-41.

388

Id. at 1539.

389

Id. at 1541-42.

390

U.S. Const. amend. XIII, § 1 (emphasis added).

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391

See, e.g., Andrea C. Armstrong, Slavery Revisited in Penal Plantation Labor, Seattle U. L. Rev. (forthcoming 2012) (on file with
author).

392

Importantly, there are limitations on the types of conditions under which involuntary labor may be extracted from prisoners. See,
e.g., id.

393

Id. (manuscript at 7); see also tenBroek, supra note 352 (noting sparse legislative history of the drafting process for the Thirteenth
Amendment).

394

1 Henry Steele Commager & Milton Cantor, Documents of American History 128, 132 (10th ed. 1988) (noting that the Northwest
Ordinance provided: “There shall be neither slavery nor involuntary servitude in the said territory otherwise than in the punishment
of crimes, whereof the party shall have been duly convicted”); Balkin & Levinson, supra note 350, at 121-28.

395

Balkin & Levinson, supra note 350, at 128-32.

396

Armstrong, supra note 392, at 15.

397

Id.

398

Harris, supra note 111, at 1716-21.

399

Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 U.S. 393, 407 (1856).

400

Harris, supra note 111, at 1719-20.

401

W.E.B Du Bois, Black Reconstruction in America 10 (1964) (noting that slaves were not considered “[wo]men; ... they could not
legally marry nor constitute families; they could not control their children; they could not appeal from their master; they could be
punished at will”).

402

Armstrong, supra note 392, at 22.

403

Id. at 5.

404

Id.

405

Id. (quoting Barnhart v. Thomas, 540 U.S. 20, 27 (2003)).

406

Id. at 6.

407

Id.

408

Id.

409

See, e.g., United States v. Reynolds, 235 U.S. 133 (1914) (invalidating peonage policies where convicted inmate concluded labor
contract with private party in exchange for payment of court-assessed fines and fees).

410

See, e.g., Brown v. Bd. of Educ., 347 U.S. 483 (1954) (ruling segregation of public schools on the basis of race unconstitutional and
overruling the doctrine of “separate but equal”); Loving v. Virginia, 388 U.S. 1 (1967) (ruling Virginia's antimiscegenation statute
unconstitutional); Johnson v. California, 543 U.S. 499 (2005) (ruling the use of race in cell assignment in a California state prison
is subject to strict scrutiny).

411

See O'Neil v. Vermont, 144 U.S. 323 (1892) (reaffirming that the Eighth Amendment was not applicable to the states).

412

See Robinson v. California, 370 U.S. 660 (1962); Powell v. Texas, 392 U.S. 514 (1968).

413

Armstrong, supra note 392, at 27.

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414

Trop v. Dulles, 356 U.S. 86 (1958).

415

See 219 U.S. 219 (1911).

416

Id. at 244.

417

See Raja Raghunath, A Promise the Nation Cannot Keep: What Prevents the Application of the Thirteenth Amendment in Prison?,
18 Wm. & Mary Bill Rts. J. 395, 395-96 (2009); Watson v. Graves, 909 F.2d 1549, 1553 (5th Cir. 1990).

418

See supra notes 342-61.

419

Koppelman, supra note 369, at 508.

420

See supra Part II.A.2.

421

William Faulkner, Requiem for a Nun (1951).

100 CALR 1239
End of Document

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