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Medical Death, Violent Death Medical Death, Violent Death
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Suicide Suicide
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The Shadow of the Cloud The Shadow of the Cloud
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Bringing Home the Body Bringing Home the Body
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7 A Dark Cloud Would Go Over: Death and Dying
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Published:February 2012
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Abstract
This chapter focuses on death and dying in Texas and California prisons in the 1930s. Mortality rates in Texas generally declined during the period, even as the prison population grew in total numbers. This probably reflected the centralization of the medical system at Texas prisons. In the same years California's mortality rate was broadly stable, and generally lower than Texas'. Nonetheless, mortality rates in California and Texas penitentiaries were significantly higher than rates for the general populations of their respective states and of the nation overall. This was true despite the fact that the prisons consisted overwhelmingly of young men, who, given their youth, would presumably not die in large numbers. Racism differentiated and allocated life chances. Data is unavailable from California, but evidence from Texas confirms that black prisoners died at higher rates than Mexican or white prisoners.
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