Examines concerns with the role and performance of private prisons, including reports of abuse and neglect, low pay and limited training for staff, poor government oversight, and lack of cost savings and community economic benefit. Makes recommendations
The recent trend toward privately owned and operated prisons calls attention to a variety...
The coercive power of the state is unique among its responsibilities. And yet, like many government ...
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...
To understand the contemporary use of contractor-operated prisons, one must appreciate the political...
A saner and safer prison policy in the United States begins by ending the scourge of the private pri...
The fallout of the financial crisis continues to have major effects across the American correctional...
Prison reformists, lawmakers, human rights activists, lobbyists, investors, government agencies, and...
hy are U.S. federal agencies and state and local governments turning to the private sector for corre...
Over the last two decades, the U.S. prison population has qua-drupled, with some 1.9 million people ...
Private prisons, like hotels, are most profitable when they are at maximum occupancy and their guest...
Governments increasingly rely on private prison companies to manage the daunting demands associated...
United States conservatism and neoliberalism have created a market for prison privatization. The bus...
Over the last 30 years, for-profit prison corporations, such as Corrections Corporation of America (...
After forty years of skyrocketing incarceration rates, there are signs that a new “decarceration era...
The recent trend toward privately owned and operated prisons calls attention to a variety...
The coercive power of the state is unique among its responsibilities. And yet, like many government ...
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...
To understand the contemporary use of contractor-operated prisons, one must appreciate the political...
A saner and safer prison policy in the United States begins by ending the scourge of the private pri...
The fallout of the financial crisis continues to have major effects across the American correctional...
Prison reformists, lawmakers, human rights activists, lobbyists, investors, government agencies, and...
hy are U.S. federal agencies and state and local governments turning to the private sector for corre...
Over the last two decades, the U.S. prison population has qua-drupled, with some 1.9 million people ...
Private prisons, like hotels, are most profitable when they are at maximum occupancy and their guest...
Governments increasingly rely on private prison companies to manage the daunting demands associated...
United States conservatism and neoliberalism have created a market for prison privatization. The bus...
Over the last 30 years, for-profit prison corporations, such as Corrections Corporation of America (...
After forty years of skyrocketing incarceration rates, there are signs that a new “decarceration era...
The recent trend toward privately owned and operated prisons calls attention to a variety...
The coercive power of the state is unique among its responsibilities. And yet, like many government ...
James, Christine (2012). Prisons for Profit in the United States: Retribution and Means vs. Ends. Ze...