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Assessing the Penal Harm Movement Francis T' Cullen

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Title: Assessing the Penal Harm Movement Francis T' Cullen


1
Assessing the Penal Harm MovementFrancis T.
Cullen
  • May 23, 2001

2
Imprisonment Binge
  • Although the promise of reform had built the
    asylums, the functionalism of custody perpetuated
    them (56).
  • The prison system has always been in crisis.
    The response to that crisis differs significantly
    across historical periods.

3
Response to the Crisis
  • 1870s New Penology
  • A group of correctional thinkers developed a
    declaration of principals that included
  • Rehabilitation through character education
  • They felt that inmates could be changed through
    treatment
  • Rejected vengeance in favor of reformation
  • 1990s New Penology
  • The philosophy of corrections has changed
  • Emphasis on efficiency
  • Mean Season

4
Penal Harm Movement
  • Penal Harm (Clear)
  • planned governmental act, whereby a citizen is
    harmed, and implies that harm is justifiable
    precisely because it is an offender who is
    suffering.
  • Increasing The pains of Imprisonment
  • Between 1973 and the beginning of the 1990s, the
    number of prisoners increased by 332.
  • The incarceration rate per 100,000 citizens
    doubled during this period.

5
Penal Harm
  • Three major movements were a result from this
    phenomenon
  • Decline of rehabilitation
  • The abolition of parole release
  • Proliferation of three strikes legislation
  • Hasnt it always been the point of prisons to
    make offenders suffer?
  • Arent prisoners better off than they were 20
    100 years ago?

6
Counterpoint
  • DiIulio
  • Argues that prison is a revolving door
  • The system has failed because predatory criminals
    have not been locked up.
  • The only neglect follows from the increased
    community risk that they offenders represent.
  • Argues that incarceration rates went through a
    drought in the 60s and 70s and now we are
    finally recovering.

7
Differential Effects of Penal Harm
  • Tonry
  • Penal harms are inequitably distributed among the
    racial and ethnic populations.
  • He argues that the increased penal harms
    experienced by African Americans after 1980 were
    the foreseeable effects of deliberate policies
    spearheaded by the Reagan and Bush
    administration.
  • War on Drugs

8
Managing Penal Harm
  • Simon
  • The goal of his piece is to link the meaning and
    practice of parole to the wider material
    conditions of the disadvantaged
  • Parole phases
  • Disciplinary parole late 1800 1950s
  • Prisoners had to work on parole
  • Rehabilitative discipline
  • Clinical parole little success
  • Hardening of urban poverty
  • Increased legal controls on parolees
  • Increased fear of violent crime

9
Managing Penal Harm (cont.)
  • Parole Phases
  • Risk Management 80s and 90s
  • The goal of this model is not to help individuals
    reintegrate into the community instead it
    serves to control behavior and discern what
    individuals should be reincarcerated.
  • Risk classification systems
  • Drug testing
  • Computerized databases
  • Tether

10
Discussion Questions
  • Should we improve the barrel or just take out the
    bad apples?
  • What is the primary detriment of the penal harm
    movement (from a liberal standpoint)?
  • If we keep on locking people up, why do we have
    such a crime problem?
  • What role should the government play in solving
    neighborhood social problems?
  • Society is judged by the way they treat their
    worst off.
  • What does the prison say about us as a society
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