The United States is home to a private prison industry, which allows for the detention of human beings to be transformed into a multi-billion dollar industry. This paper traces the parallels between the post-civil war convict leasing system and the current system of prison privatization, which encourages the commodification of black bodies in order to maintain a racial hierarchy. It analyzes the incompatibility of prison privatization with the US Constitution. Private prisons, which hold African American men at a higher rate that state-run prisons, take cost-cutting measures in order to increase profit, which expose prisoners to higher rates of abuse and increased recidivism rates. Private prisons have significant political power to determi...
This is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published arti...
The practice of using the labor of inmates in state and Federal prisons to produce commodities has e...
As in slavery, where people profited by the captivity and dehumanization of others, this essay argue...
The United States is home to a private prison industry, which allows for the detention of human bein...
United States conservatism and neoliberalism have created a market for prison privatization. The bus...
The thesis Prison Privatization in the United States: The Limits and Consequences of the Transfer of...
The recent trend toward privately owned and operated prisons calls attention to a variety...
James, Christine (2012). Prisons for Profit in the United States: Retribution and Means vs. Ends. Ze...
abstract: In which industry that has ever been profit generating, does a firm profit from their fail...
The thesis will focus on prison privatization and the accountability that private prison companies s...
The prison-industrial complex is a term used to refer to the rapid expansion of the prison populatio...
Contemporary prison systems are faced with such overwhelming problems that they are argued to be in ...
For-profit prisons, jails, and alternative corrections present a disturbing commodification of the c...
Over the last two decades, the U.S. prison population has qua-drupled, with some 1.9 million people ...
This thesis examines the politics of prison privatization in the United States as an instance of the...
This is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published arti...
The practice of using the labor of inmates in state and Federal prisons to produce commodities has e...
As in slavery, where people profited by the captivity and dehumanization of others, this essay argue...
The United States is home to a private prison industry, which allows for the detention of human bein...
United States conservatism and neoliberalism have created a market for prison privatization. The bus...
The thesis Prison Privatization in the United States: The Limits and Consequences of the Transfer of...
The recent trend toward privately owned and operated prisons calls attention to a variety...
James, Christine (2012). Prisons for Profit in the United States: Retribution and Means vs. Ends. Ze...
abstract: In which industry that has ever been profit generating, does a firm profit from their fail...
The thesis will focus on prison privatization and the accountability that private prison companies s...
The prison-industrial complex is a term used to refer to the rapid expansion of the prison populatio...
Contemporary prison systems are faced with such overwhelming problems that they are argued to be in ...
For-profit prisons, jails, and alternative corrections present a disturbing commodification of the c...
Over the last two decades, the U.S. prison population has qua-drupled, with some 1.9 million people ...
This thesis examines the politics of prison privatization in the United States as an instance of the...
This is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published arti...
The practice of using the labor of inmates in state and Federal prisons to produce commodities has e...
As in slavery, where people profited by the captivity and dehumanization of others, this essay argue...