The Invisible Prison: The Hidden Architecture of Inequality in AmericaIn America, inequality isn't just an outcome - it's an architecture. Unseen. Unquestioned. And for millions of people, inescapable.The Invisible Prison exposes the four structural forces that quietly shape who thrives, who struggles, and who is systematically pushed to the margins. Drawing on research from the Federal Reserve, Pew Research Center, the Census Bureau, Harvard's Opportunity Insights, and other leading institutions, Taren L.P. Rowek reveals how everyday Americans are trapped by systems they didn't build and cannot easily escape.Through clear analysis and human-centered storytelling, Rowek uncovers the hidden machinery behind inequality - the policies, histories, and institutional habits that determine access to food, housing, safety, opportunity, and power. From food deserts and economic precarity to immigration barriers, political identity, and the silent pressures that keep people from speaking up, this book maps the quiet forces that shape American life.At the heart of the book is the framework Rowek calls The Four Walls of the Cage: - The Wall of Economics - how wages, wealth, debt, and financial fragility limit mobility- The Wall of Geography - how ZIP codes, transportation, and neighborhood investment predetermine opportunity- The Wall of Identity - how race, gender, sexuality, religion, and culture shape institutional treatment- The Wall of Power - how political structures, corporate influence, and institutional distrust reinforce the status quoTogether, these walls form an invisible prison - not built of bars and concrete, but of silence, policy, and deeply embedded norms.The Invisible Prison is not a partisan argument. It is a clear-eyed examination of how systems function, who they serve, and why so many people feel stuck no matter how hard they work. Rowek blends data with lived experience to illuminate the realities behind America's most urgent debates, offering readers a framework for understanding inequality that is both accessible and deeply human.This book is for readers who want to understand: - Why economic insecurity is rising even as productivity grows- Why geography predicts life expectancy, income, and mobility- Why identity still shapes institutional outcomes- Why political narratives divide people who share the same struggles- Why silence - personal and institutional - keeps the system intactThe Invisible Prison is a guide for anyone who senses that something in America is fundamentally off - and wants to understand the forces behind it. It is a call to see what has long been hidden, to name what has long been normalized, and to imagine what becomes possible when the walls are finally exposed.
AmazonPagina's: 166, Paperback, Independently published
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