One of the frequently criticized aspects of American mass incarceration, privatized incarceration, is frequently considered worse, by definition, than public incarceration for both philosophical ethical reasons and because its for-profit structure creates a disincentive to invest in improving prison conditions. Relying on literature about the neoliberal state and on insights from public choice economics, this Article sets out to challenge the distinction between public and private incarceration, making two main arguments: piecemeal privatization of functions, utilities, and services within state prisons make them operate more like private facilities, and public actors respond to the cost/benefit pressures of the market just like private one...
The coercive power of the state is distinctive, and yet incarceration is becoming more widely privat...
The prison-industrial complex is a term used to refer to the rapid expansion of the prison populatio...
What is the political impact of prison privatization? Does prison privatization introduce a new poli...
To date, the debate over private prisons has focused largely on the relative efficiency of private p...
The pragmatics of privatization offer terrain for a critical understanding of the relationship betwe...
Contemporary prison systems are faced with such overwhelming problems that they are argued to be in ...
United States conservatism and neoliberalism have created a market for prison privatization. The bus...
James, Christine (2012). Prisons for Profit in the United States: Retribution and Means vs. Ends. Ze...
The recent trend toward privately owned and operated prisons calls attention to a variety...
For-profit prisons, jails, and alternative corrections present a disturbing commodification of the c...
This is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published arti...
This independent study examines and empirically tests the effects of the privatization of prisons in...
The resurgence of private prisons during the 1980s has caused a lot of debate. If a private firm can...
Why have private prisons failed to live up to the promises of neoliberalism? Is there a better appro...
There are two chronically unexamined assumptions about privatisation in punishment. First is the ide...
The coercive power of the state is distinctive, and yet incarceration is becoming more widely privat...
The prison-industrial complex is a term used to refer to the rapid expansion of the prison populatio...
What is the political impact of prison privatization? Does prison privatization introduce a new poli...
To date, the debate over private prisons has focused largely on the relative efficiency of private p...
The pragmatics of privatization offer terrain for a critical understanding of the relationship betwe...
Contemporary prison systems are faced with such overwhelming problems that they are argued to be in ...
United States conservatism and neoliberalism have created a market for prison privatization. The bus...
James, Christine (2012). Prisons for Profit in the United States: Retribution and Means vs. Ends. Ze...
The recent trend toward privately owned and operated prisons calls attention to a variety...
For-profit prisons, jails, and alternative corrections present a disturbing commodification of the c...
This is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published arti...
This independent study examines and empirically tests the effects of the privatization of prisons in...
The resurgence of private prisons during the 1980s has caused a lot of debate. If a private firm can...
Why have private prisons failed to live up to the promises of neoliberalism? Is there a better appro...
There are two chronically unexamined assumptions about privatisation in punishment. First is the ide...
The coercive power of the state is distinctive, and yet incarceration is becoming more widely privat...
The prison-industrial complex is a term used to refer to the rapid expansion of the prison populatio...
What is the political impact of prison privatization? Does prison privatization introduce a new poli...