Title: Incarceration and Prison Society
1Incarceration and Prison Society
- History and Goals
- Prison Organization
- Correctional Officers
- Prison Society
- Women in Prison
- Prison Programs
- Violence
- Prisoner Rights
2Prison History
- Big Houses
- South different
- Traditional Prison Population
- Changing Prison Population
3GOALS OF INCARCERATION
Custodial
Rehabilitation
Reintegration
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5Governing Prisoners
- Authority Perception vs. Reality
- Issues
- Total Power?
- Rewards and Punishment
- Cooperation and Leadership
6Correctional Officers
7Prison Society
- Prisonization
- Inmate Code
- Adaptive Roles
- Prison Economy
8Women In Prison
- 8 of new admissions.
- 6 of total population.
- Increase of 200 since 1980.
200 100 0
1980..........................1995
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10Women in Prison
- Social Relationships
- Subculture
- Programs
- Children
11Basic Prison Programs
12Basic Prison Programs
Diagnostic Services
elementary secondary college
Educational Programs
13Basic Prison Programs
Diagnostic Services
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elementary secondary college
Educational Programs
Vocational Programs
14Basic Prison Programs
Diagnostic Services
carpentry plumbing electrical gardening printing k
eyboarding
elementary secondary college
Educational Programs
Vocational Programs
Counseling Services
15Basic Prison Programs
Diagnostic Services
carpentry plumbing electrical gardening printing k
eyboarding
elementary secondary college
Educational Programs
Vocational Programs
Counseling Services
Recreation Services
16Basic Prison Programs
Diagnostic Services
carpentry plumbing electrical gardening printing k
eyboarding
elementary secondary college
Educational Programs
Vocational Programs
Counseling Services
Recreation Services
Religious Services
17Basic Prison Programs
Diagnostic Services
carpentry plumbing electrical gardening printing k
eyboarding
elementary secondary college
Educational Programs
Vocational Programs
Counseling Services
Recreation Services
Religious Services
Medical Services
18Prison Industries
- Established early on
- Internal maintenance
- Industry shops and contract work
- Inefficient
- Opposed by labor unions
19Violence in prison
- Explanations
- Types
- Contributing factors that can be controlled
20Until the 1960s Supreme Court Hands Off
policy on prisons Cooper v. Pate (1964) -
prisoners may challenge the conditions of their
confinement under civil rights legislation.
21First Amendment Rights Theriault v. Carson (1977)
no sham religious practices allowed Procunier
v. Martinez (1974) censorship of mail only to
extent necessary to maintain security
22Fourth Amendment Rights Hudson v. Palmer (1984)
officials can search cell and confiscate
materials Bell v. Wolfish (1979) body searches
allowed if clear and legitimate purpose outweighs
invasion of personal privacy
23Eighth Amendment Rights Three principle tests
1) shocks conscience 2) unnecessarily cruel
3)goes beyond legitimate penal aims Estelle v.
Gamble (1976) no deliberate indifference to
medical needs
2414th Amendment Rights Wolff v. McDonnell (1974)
basic due process rights in disciplinary
hearings Lee v. Washington (1968) no racial
segregation in prisons only justified
temporarily to restore order or prevent violence
25Hello, is this microphone on?
- _____ is the model of correctional institutions
that emphasizes maintenance of the offenders
ties to family and community. - Reintegration Model
- _____ are often used by prison officials as a
communication source between officials and the
inmate population. - Inmate leaders
- _____ is the model of corrections that emphasizes
security, discipline, and order. - Custodial Model
- In ____ the Supreme Court said prisoners have
basic due process rights in disciplinary hearings - Wolff v. McDonnell (1974)
- _____ is the orientation that judges had toward
prisoners rights prior to the 1960s. - Hands off policy
- _____ is the system of barter and purchase based
on cigarettes and other items that prisoners use
to gain desired items - Prison economy