This note focuses on two key issues about production in U.S. prisons for sale to customers outside their walls: the relative labor productivity and wages of these prison industries compared with other U.S. industries; and the types of goods and services that these prison industries produce. The results are drawn, in part, from my own survey of state prison industry directors
The thesis Prison Privatization in the United States: The Limits and Consequences of the Transfer of...
The Council reviews the Department of Corrections’ program of contracting with private companies to ...
The coercive power of the state is distinctive, and yet incarceration is becoming more widely privat...
The practice of using the labor of inmates in state and Federal prisons to produce commodities has e...
Understanding the prison industrial complex concerning prison labor is crucial to stopping the explo...
Over the last two decades, the U.S. prison population has qua-drupled, with some 1.9 million people ...
abstract: In which industry that has ever been profit generating, does a firm profit from their fail...
The Prison Industries (P.I.) division of the Indiana State Department of Correction presented the ch...
Although labor was central to the internal life of the early penitentiary, it has virtually vanished...
James, Christine (2012). Prisons for Profit in the United States: Retribution and Means vs. Ends. Ze...
This report provides an economic overview of the correctional sector as background for the unfolding...
Throughout the United States, United Kingdom, China, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand, prisoners ar...
The growth of public expense associated with mass incarceration has led many carceral systems to pus...
The purpose of this study is to determine why the enhanced prison industries (PIE) model has prosper...
The recent trend toward privately owned and operated prisons calls attention to a variety...
The thesis Prison Privatization in the United States: The Limits and Consequences of the Transfer of...
The Council reviews the Department of Corrections’ program of contracting with private companies to ...
The coercive power of the state is distinctive, and yet incarceration is becoming more widely privat...
The practice of using the labor of inmates in state and Federal prisons to produce commodities has e...
Understanding the prison industrial complex concerning prison labor is crucial to stopping the explo...
Over the last two decades, the U.S. prison population has qua-drupled, with some 1.9 million people ...
abstract: In which industry that has ever been profit generating, does a firm profit from their fail...
The Prison Industries (P.I.) division of the Indiana State Department of Correction presented the ch...
Although labor was central to the internal life of the early penitentiary, it has virtually vanished...
James, Christine (2012). Prisons for Profit in the United States: Retribution and Means vs. Ends. Ze...
This report provides an economic overview of the correctional sector as background for the unfolding...
Throughout the United States, United Kingdom, China, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand, prisoners ar...
The growth of public expense associated with mass incarceration has led many carceral systems to pus...
The purpose of this study is to determine why the enhanced prison industries (PIE) model has prosper...
The recent trend toward privately owned and operated prisons calls attention to a variety...
The thesis Prison Privatization in the United States: The Limits and Consequences of the Transfer of...
The Council reviews the Department of Corrections’ program of contracting with private companies to ...
The coercive power of the state is distinctive, and yet incarceration is becoming more widely privat...