The faults of American prisons and jails are not to be laid at the door of any single group, neither of prison architects, administrators, correction officers, nor of the agents of criminal justice, but of the entire structure of public crime control, which is content to deal with society\u27s manifold problems of economic, social and human relations largely in terms of punishment. Despite its lip service to theories of social control by education, American penology stands immobilized today with one foot in the road of rehabilitation and the other in the road of punishment, and here, to my mind, lies our major dilemma and problem
Get tough control policies in the United States are often portrayed as the reflection of the public...
Currently over 2.4 million people are incarcerated in the state prison system in the United States....
A little more than one year ago, a diverse group of individuals— respected civic leaders, experience...
The problem of prisons and prison reform has become a subject of much discussion and study in our co...
Dysfunctional features of American penology are mitigated somewhat by the application (though uneven...
A primary argument underlying this paper is that it is possible to capture a particular theory or co...
The prisons of today are a failure, for they are not effective instruments of rehabilitation of thei...
This paper reexamines the evolution of the latent and manifest functions of American prisons origina...
Mass Incarceration: Punitive Laws that Challenge Equal Rights and Opportunities for all explores Ame...
A primary argument underlying this paper is that it is possible to capture a particular theory or co...
Get tough control policies in the United States are often portrayed as the reflection of the public...
Punishment has prolifically been a necessity in civil society and a duty of the state to create inst...
Throughout history the penal system has been viewed as the paramount means of dealing with criminals...
With over two million Americans behind bars, and over seven million under some form of state supervi...
Prisoners in America. Edited by Lloyd E. Ohlin. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall. 1973. P...
Get tough control policies in the United States are often portrayed as the reflection of the public...
Currently over 2.4 million people are incarcerated in the state prison system in the United States....
A little more than one year ago, a diverse group of individuals— respected civic leaders, experience...
The problem of prisons and prison reform has become a subject of much discussion and study in our co...
Dysfunctional features of American penology are mitigated somewhat by the application (though uneven...
A primary argument underlying this paper is that it is possible to capture a particular theory or co...
The prisons of today are a failure, for they are not effective instruments of rehabilitation of thei...
This paper reexamines the evolution of the latent and manifest functions of American prisons origina...
Mass Incarceration: Punitive Laws that Challenge Equal Rights and Opportunities for all explores Ame...
A primary argument underlying this paper is that it is possible to capture a particular theory or co...
Get tough control policies in the United States are often portrayed as the reflection of the public...
Punishment has prolifically been a necessity in civil society and a duty of the state to create inst...
Throughout history the penal system has been viewed as the paramount means of dealing with criminals...
With over two million Americans behind bars, and over seven million under some form of state supervi...
Prisoners in America. Edited by Lloyd E. Ohlin. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall. 1973. P...
Get tough control policies in the United States are often portrayed as the reflection of the public...
Currently over 2.4 million people are incarcerated in the state prison system in the United States....
A little more than one year ago, a diverse group of individuals— respected civic leaders, experience...