

John Bardes, "The Carceral City: Slavery and the Making of Mass Incarceration in New Orleans, 1803-1930" (UNC Press, 2024)
Jul 5, 2025
John Bardes, a historian specializing in slavery and race, dives into the overlooked relationship between slavery and mass incarceration in New Orleans. He reveals that enslaved and free populations were incarcerated at alarming rates, contradicting common assumptions. Bardes discusses how slaveholders used prisons for control and profit, linking these practices to the legacy of racialized policing and vagrancy laws. He even highlights the forgotten histories that inform today’s issues with mass incarceration, advocating for a deeper understanding of these historical ties.
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High Incarceration in Slave Society
- Slaveholders in New Orleans heavily relied on incarceration and state coercion to control enslaved people.
- Enslaved individuals were jailed at higher rates than Black residents today in the city with the highest incarceration rates in the US.
Value of Urban Prison Records
- Urban prison records provide rich insight into enslaved peoples' lives and state control mechanisms.
- These overlooked records can motivate new studies on prison and slavery systems across the Atlantic world.
Global Exchange Shaping Slave Prisons
- Prisons and slave systems in New Orleans were shaped by global exchanges of penal ideas.
- Slaveholders adapted international prison concepts into brutal systems targeting enslaved people's subjugation.