While decarceration has become fashionable, American penology remains in the throes of a penal harm movement, which posits that offenders should receive harsh punishment to deter them and others from future offending. Penal harm aims to enhance offenders’ punishment during their incarceration by making conditions in jails and prisons as painful and difficult as possible. Penal harm practices include, limiting inmates’ access to basic comforts such as coffee and tasty food, enhancing humiliations through chain gangs and wearing pink uniforms, and not supplying adequate health care. Given that the majority of incarcerated persons will eventually return to society, correctional health care plays an important role in public and community health...
Studies on health and incarceration have extensively demonstrated that incarcerated women have poore...
Over 100,000 prisoners are currently behind bars in the U.S. Researchers suggest that up to 25% of e...
Mass incarceration is a sociostructural driver of profound health inequalities in the United States....
Rapidly increasing numbers of women incarcerated in the United States have created an overwhelming n...
Despite the recent passage of federal legislation requiring free access to menstrual health products...
Many researchers in social science and criminal justice fields have shown that reproductive health s...
Prenatal healthcare services available to pregnant inmates in state prisons are wholly inadequate. D...
Women are the fastest growing segment of the correctional population in the United States. Most are ...
Only one group of people in the United States has a constitutional right to health care—the incarcer...
In the past few decades, US policies have led to an unprecedented increase in the number of people b...
One of the most compelling arguments for improvements to healthcare for individuals who are incarcer...
Abstract: This article examines the health of women in prison, taking into account social structures...
Thesis deals with female prisoners in the American prison system and their overall position within t...
This article explores how the implementation of the penal harm movement within a correctional health...
abstract: The purpose of this study was to evaluate how incarceration impacts the health of female i...
Studies on health and incarceration have extensively demonstrated that incarcerated women have poore...
Over 100,000 prisoners are currently behind bars in the U.S. Researchers suggest that up to 25% of e...
Mass incarceration is a sociostructural driver of profound health inequalities in the United States....
Rapidly increasing numbers of women incarcerated in the United States have created an overwhelming n...
Despite the recent passage of federal legislation requiring free access to menstrual health products...
Many researchers in social science and criminal justice fields have shown that reproductive health s...
Prenatal healthcare services available to pregnant inmates in state prisons are wholly inadequate. D...
Women are the fastest growing segment of the correctional population in the United States. Most are ...
Only one group of people in the United States has a constitutional right to health care—the incarcer...
In the past few decades, US policies have led to an unprecedented increase in the number of people b...
One of the most compelling arguments for improvements to healthcare for individuals who are incarcer...
Abstract: This article examines the health of women in prison, taking into account social structures...
Thesis deals with female prisoners in the American prison system and their overall position within t...
This article explores how the implementation of the penal harm movement within a correctional health...
abstract: The purpose of this study was to evaluate how incarceration impacts the health of female i...
Studies on health and incarceration have extensively demonstrated that incarcerated women have poore...
Over 100,000 prisoners are currently behind bars in the U.S. Researchers suggest that up to 25% of e...
Mass incarceration is a sociostructural driver of profound health inequalities in the United States....