Carceral is a member of a small but imposing family: like its close relations incarcerate (meaning "to imprison") and incarceration (meaning "confinement in a jail or prison"), its ultimate source is the Latin word for "prison," carcer. All three words have been in use since the 16th century, and all three are more common today than they were a century ago. Carceral has always been the rarest of the group, but its use has increased significantly since the turn of the current century, most often within academic or legal contexts.
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Though there are a few federal and state prisons for those convicted of serious crimes scattered across the county, the Southland’s claim to carceral fame lies more in its jails.—Keri Blakinger, Los Angeles Times, 9 Oct. 2024 My fellow West Coast native is one of the carceral state’s most important critics.—Mitchell S. Jackson, TIME, 2 Oct. 2024 With Orange Is the New Black, Kohan reshaped a middle-class white writer’s prison memoir into a dark yet vibrant ensemble dramedy of carceral injustice starring the Black and brown women disproportionately ensnared in that system.—Judy Berman, TIME, 25 July 2024 If a fair system of payment for carceral employment were put in place, this viewpoint might be borne out.—Phillip Vance Smith, JSTOR Daily, 1 Feb. 2024 See all Example Sentences for carceral
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