Winner, 2016 William H. Riker Book Award in Political Economy
American Political Science Association, Political Economy Section
Winner, 2014 Outstanding Publication Award
International Association for the Study of Organized Crime
Shortlisted, 2014 Thinking Allowed Ethnography Award
British Sociological Association and the BBC
When many people think of prison gangs, they think of chaotic bands of violent, racist thugs. Few people think of gangs as sophisticated organizations (often with elaborate written constitutions) that regulate the social and economic life of the prison. Yet as David Skarbek argues, gangs form to create order among outlaws, producing alternative governance institutions to facilitate illegal activity. This book is a fascinating look into the seemingly irrational, truly astonishing, and often tragic world of life among the society of captives.
Reviews
This is a fascinating study of what the title suggests. It is also a remarkable study of a "natural experiment" in the evolution of government. Put a couple of thousand men, not of the nicest kind, into close confinement with limited communication facilities and little government, and see what happens. What happens is government, based largely on ethnic gangs, with hierarchy, rules, and sometimes written constitutions. The basic problem to be solved is the management of the market for drugs, and solving that leads to genuine institutions. A great read.
--- Thomas C. Schelling, Nobel Laureate in Economics (2005)
David Skarbek’s "The Social Order of the Underworld" can be read with great profit on each of three levels: it is an engrossing ethnography of American prison life; it is a penetrating economic analysis of the organization of the drug trade; and it offers an innovative theory of how an effective governing institution can originate in the wild and exert legitimate domination over its subjects. This book is a stunning achievement that makes me proud to be a social scientist.
--- David D. Laitin, Watkins Professor of Political Science, Stanford University
David Skarbek has written a wonderful book. It is a gripping account of prison gangs, pointing to a wholesale re-thinking of the management of American prisons. But it is far more than this: if you care at all about ethnic politics, violence, and the emergence of social order, organizational theory and the problems of collective action—in short, if you have any interest at all in how societies govern themselves—you have to read this book.
--- Philip Keefer, Lead Economist, Development Research Group, The World Bank
Meticulously researched and convincingly argued...Skarbek’s book is an outstanding addition to our understanding of self-governance, its ubiquity, and effectiveness.
--- Peter T. Leeson, George Mason University, Author of The Invisible Hook: the Hidden Economics of Pirates
Drawing on economic theory, David Skarbek shows how social order can emerge in the most unlikely circumstances. In the nasty and brutish world of American prisons, gangs have emerged to govern the penal system, settle dispute and regulate the market for drugs. This is a story about the ingenuity of gang members and of institutional failure. The Social Order of the Underworld straddles all the social sciences to give us a masterly account of the human condition in the most harrowing circumstances. Add a vivid narrative style and the total absence of jargon, and you have in your hand a terrific book.
--- Federico Varese, Professor of Criminology, Oxford University, Author of Mafias on the Move
Every once in a while a daring book or article comes along that helps us establish new connections between apparently distant analytical and geographic locations…The Social Order of the Underworld, by David Skarbek does just that…it is prime evidence of why rigorous, but methodologically flexible, academic research and heterodox thought is often much more deeply relevant for the real world….Many fields of study need to take notice of what this book provides. It is deeply relevant for anyone interested in prisons anywhere, but also to those working on organized crime and gangs, violence, ethnicity and race, governance, urban sociology and politics, economics and, even, international development and anthropology.
--- Graham Denyer Willis, University of Cambridge
David Skarbek’s The Social Order of the Underworld: How Prison Gangs Govern the American Penal System is a revelatory account of the etiology, flourishing, and demise of prison gangs. Skarbek works in a rational choice tradition, but also brings to bear a rich tapestry of first-hand accounts. He shows that prison gangs are an inevitable (and, yes, rational, even efficient) response to mass incarceration and the new demographics of prisons. The result is a compelling portrait of the inadvertent consequences of mass incarceration.
--- Aziz Huq, University of Chicago Law School
Perhaps the most complete and compelling account of prison gangs to date... a noteworthy achievement. Social Order is a thoughtful and thought-provoking book that uses the curious case of prison gangs as a conduit to teach an important lesson about how informal rule of law will rise when established social and economic institutions fall. Skarbek has produced a cogently written, multifaceted text, which will attract analytical sociologists, cultural economists, and criminologists alike and hopefully incite further meaningful study of prison life and penology.
--- James Densley, Metropolitan State University
[Skarbek] makes his case with compelling logic and evidence… [he] brings a refreshing perspective to prison research… A short review cannot do justice to this valuable work or fully develop the nuances. It is perhaps the best book on prison culture and administration since James Jacobs’ Stateville: The Penitentiary in Mass Society.
--- Jim Thomas, Northern Illinois University
A fascinating account...a model example of how to use economic analysis to highlight the illegal world, without falling into the trap of economic imperialism...a must-read.
--- Diane Coyle, University of Manchester
This work is an intriguing, well-written and insightful contribution to the gang and prison literature...I found the intervention of Skarbek’s work to be thought-provoking and analytically enriching in an area that is extraordinarily bereft of rigorous critical inquiry
--- David C. Brotherton, John Jay College
This is a really incredible book. I was utterly fascinated by it. I learned an immense amount, way too much, actually, about prisons...it's a fabulous application of economics to a wide range of social phenomena. It's really an amazing book.
--- Russell Roberts, Hoover Institution, Stanford University
Undoubtedly the most important work on prison gangs in the last two decades...
--- David Pyrooz, UC Boulder, and Scott Decker, Arizona State University
I told you off camera that you did a great job writing this book. You got a lot of things right in here. I asked you if you ever worked in prison because it just kind of blew me away that you got things so accurately in a lot of these pages.
--- Michael Cantrell, The Prison Officer Podcast