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How prisons, established to fight crime, produce crime -- a sequel to our December cover story, "The Prison-Industrial Complex"
Nevertheless, horror stories have led to calls for longer prison sentences, for the abolition of parole, and for the increasingly punitive treatment of prisoners. The politics of opinion-poll populism has encouraged elected and corrections officials to build isolation units, put more prisons on "lockdown" status (in which prisoners are kept in their cells about twenty-three hours a day), abolish grants that allowed prisoners to study toward diplomas and degrees, and generally make life inside as miserable as possible. Marc Mauer, the assistant director of the Sentencing Project, an advocacy group based in Washington, D.C., says, "Fifty years ago rehabilitation was a primary goal of the system." Nowadays it's not. "The situation we're in now is completely unprecedented," Mauer says. "The number going through the system dwarfs that in any other period in U.S. history and virtually in any other country as well." In 1986, according to figures published in the Survey of State Prison Inmates (1991), 175,662 people were serving sentences of more than ten years; five years later 306,006 were serving such sentences. People haven't become more antisocial; their infractions and bad habits are just being punished more ruthlessly. Crime, however, is a complex issue, and responses to it that might instinctively seem sensible, or simply satisfying, may prove deeply counterproductive. Locking ever more people away will in the long run increase the number of Robert Scullys in our midst. |
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More on politics & society in The Atlantic Monthly and Atlantic Unbound. From the archives:
"The Prison-Industrial Complex," by Eric Schlosser (December, 1998)
"A Model Prison," by Robert Worth (November, 1995)
"Why Prisoners Riot," by H.W. Hollister (October, 1955)
"Prison Progress," by Brice P. Disque (March, 1922)
"Humanizing the Prisons," by Morrison I. Swift (August, 1911) From Atlantic Unbound:
Online Conference: "Prisons in America," (November, 1995) Related links:
Bureau of Justice Statistics
Committee to End the Marion Lockdown |