Running the numbers : race, police, and the history of urban gambling
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Running the numbers : race, police, and the history of urban gambling
(Historical studies of urban America)
University of Chicago Press, c2020
- : cloth
Available at 3 libraries
Note
Summary: "Strictly and widely illegal, the most common manifestations of urban gambling were once "the numbers game" and "policy," in which people would place daily bets on random numbers, through community institutions, such as newsstands and barbershops. Gambling became one of the largest economic activities and sources of employment in some nonwhite neighborhoods-and therefore it drew intense police interest. Some of the most corrupt and blatantly discriminatory police actions centered on gambling and its practitioners. The state's interest doomed urban gambling, as many states coopted the market with their own hugely lucrative lotteries. A game that first flourished in poor and nonwhite urban communities has become America's game"--Provided by publisher
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
by "Nielsen BookData"