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III' Corrections in the U'S'

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Title: III' Corrections in the U'S'


1
III. Corrections in the U.S.
  • Given an ample supply of apprehended,
    adjudicated, convicted criminal offenders, the
    final question is What to do with them?
  • This means the Corrections component of the CJ
    System, considering
  • What corrections in the U.S. involves
  • How it is set up
  • How it seems to work
  • How it got this way
  • What seem to be the current trend

2
What is the Range of Possible Criminal
Punishments?

Imprisonment (Incarceration)
Suspended Sentence
Intermediate Sanctions
Death
Probation
Fines
  • Other possibilities?
  • -- Banishment
  • - Corporal punishment

3
Dominant focus is on the use of imprisonment to
punish criminals
  • Historically how has that evolved and changed?
  • What is happening currently in the use of
    correctional institutions e.g., what types of
    prisons are there and who is in them?
  • What seem to be the prospects for future trends?

4
Incarceration/Imprisonment
  • Use of imprisonment for punishment seems an old
    procedure (e.g., dungeons slave galleys)
  • But extensive use of imprisonment for criminals
    is a more recent practice
  • Through Middle Ages, reliance instead on
  • Corporal punishment execution
  • Fines and forfeiture
  • Exile/banishment/transportation
  • Slavery
  • Public humiliation/shaming
  • Inspiring fear and dread through brutality

5
Incarceration/Imprisonment (cont.)
  • In Middle Ages, prisons mainly used to
  • Hold persons awaiting trial, punishment, or
    appeal
  • Motivate persons to pay debts or agree to terms
  • Incapacitate persons who couldnt be executed
  • Incapacitate mentally ill persons
  • Achieve religious indoctrination
  • Punish slaves (rather than common criminals)
  • Also, use Prison for problem populations
  • Workhouses Poorhouses in 16th-18th centuries
  • Contain motivate the poor unemployed

6
Incarceration/Imprisonment (cont.)
  • Basic goals of punishment in Middle Ages
  • Retribution and atonement
  • Deterrence
  • Incapacitation
  • The goal of Reformation/Rehabilitation didnt
    emerge until the Enlightenment in the 18th
    century
  • Influence of development in science philosophy
  • Emphasis on reason rationality
  • Emphasis on human progress improvement

7
Major names in the enlightened use of
Imprisonment to correct
  • Beccaria elaborated theory of justice as
    rational and human use of punishment
  • Emphasize deterrence rather than retribution
  • Emphasize loss of freedom over physical brutality
  • John Howard Prison reformer
  • Emphasize humane conditions of imprisonment
  • Emphasize that punishment should improve people
  • Jeremy Bentham Utilitarian philosopher/author
  • Apply Utilitarian principles to punishment of
    crime
  • Apply rational logic to the design of prisons

8
Major eras in use of Imprisonment
  • Penitentiary Movement (early 19th century)
  • Religion-based reform (Quakers)
  • Aim at moral reformation of offenders through
  • Determinate sentences
  • Isolation and silence
  • Labor and reflection
  • Walnut Street Jail in Philadelphia (1790)
  • New York and Pennsylvania Systems (1829-30)
  • Auburn prison (NY) Congregate system
  • Cherry Hill/Western (Penn) Segregate system
  • Reformatory Movement (late 19th century)

9
Incarceration/Imprisonment (cont.)
  • Reformatory Movement (late 19th century)
  • Penology-based reform (science-religion mixture)
  • Aim at scientific reformation of offenders
    through
  • Indeterminate sentences parole
  • Classification security levels
  • Work, education, and military discipline
  • Zebulon Brockway and the Elmira Reformatory (NY)
    as the acme of reformatory philosophy
  • Rise of the Big House (early 20th century)
  • The prison as a modern institution

10
The Big House Prison
11
Incarceration/Imprisonment (cont.)
  • 20th century prison eras
  • Industrial prisons (1900-1930s) (new big house)
  • Reformation through productive mass labor
  • Prisons as productive/profitable
  • Also prison farms chain gangs as related
    variations
  • Rehabilitation-oriented prisons (1940-1970s)
  • Indeterminate sentences parole
  • Classification security levels
  • Labor and military discipline
  • Post-modern Security-oriented prisons (1980- )
  • Post-Martinson (Martinson Report) developments
  • Technological advances

12
Incarceration/Imprisonment (cont.)
  • Post-modern Security-oriented prisons (after
    1980)
  • New designs for prisons jails
  • 1st generation linear/intermittent supervision
    (the old Big House model adapted)
  • Radial design
  • Telephone Pole design
  • 2nd generation modular/indirect supervision
  • 3rd generation modular/direct supervision

13
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14
First Generation Prison/Jail Design
15
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17
Third Generation Prison/Jail Design
18
Incarceration/Imprisonment (cont.)
  • Post-modern Security-oriented prisons (after
    1980)
  • New designs for prisons jails
  • New technologies
  • New organization and philosophy (Corporate
    models)
  • Professionalization
  • Privatization
  • More conservative, punitive political context
  • Much less emphasis on rehabilitation
  • More more emphasis on security and deterrence

19
Why the big changes after 1980?
  • Dramatic increase in prisoner population
  • More determinate, mandatory, and punitive
    sentencing
  • The War on Drugs
  • Increased incarceration of women
  • Boom in construction of new prisons
  • Need for greatly expanded capacity
  • Need to replace old, outmoded, overcrowded
    facilities
  • Increased competition for prison locations
  • Emergence of new technologies
  • Construction and architecture (faster
    construction)
  • Technology and security (better facilities
    services)
  • Privatization of corrections

20
Emphasize importance of cycles in correctional
practices
  • The seductive illusion of the new
  • Strong attraction to what looks new and
    innovative
  • Ignorance of history means that old ideas look
    new (if they are old enough to be forgotten)
  • Very few genuinely new ideas
  • Rediscovery Reinvention of old ideas
  • We are continually rediscovering the wheel
    repackaged to look like a new program
  • CJ/Corrections is ongoing recycling operation
  • E.g., boot camp programs, privatization, getting
    tough on juveniles, mandatory sentences

21
How much is prison used to punish criminal
offenders?
  • In 2005, over 2.3 million persons were in prison
    or jail in the U.S. on a given day (slightly
    under 1.5 million in prison)
  • Is that a lot?
  • Compared to what?
  • Higher or lower than it used to be?
  • More or less than occurs in other countries?
  • (for some answers, consider the next two slides)

22
  • Rate of imprisonment was constant over most of
    20th century (until last two decades)

23
25 Selected Nations
(jail prison inmates)
U.S. ?
24
Notable features of prison use in U.S.
  • Incarceration rate is 5 times higher than it used
    to be (pre-1980) higher than other countries
  • Persons are in prison for same amount of time
  • No change in average sentence since 1920
  • Some longer sentences but more people
    incarcerated for lesser crimes
  • Imprisonment is used unevenly
  • Large regional differences (highest in Southern
    states lowest in Northern states)
  • Large racial disparities relative to population
  • (40 of prisoners Black 35 white 20
    Latino)
  • Large gender disparities
  • (93 of prisoners male 7 of prisoners
    female)

25
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26
How to explain the large disparities?
  • Racial and gender discrimination part of the
    explanation
  • But also reflects differences in types (
    seriousness) of crimes committed and in criminal
    records
  • In sum Research shows that the best predictors
    of sentencing (imprisonment) offense
    characteristics and prior record of offender
  • However, race and gender by themselves still
    explain part of the differences (which reflect
    extra-legal influences on sentencing and
    punishment)

27
Forms of incarceration in the U.S. (clarifying
the distinctions)
  • Lock-ups
  • Jails
  • Prisons
  • Alternative Institutions
  • Farms and camps
  • Halfway houses (community residential facilities)
  • Medical/mental health facilities

28
Lock-up vs. Jail
  • Lock-up
  • Local (in police custody)
  • Hold arrestees until transfer to jail (detention
    only)
  • Very short-term (24-48 hrs. maximum)
  • Jail
  • County-level mostly
  • Hold both pre-trial convicted persons
    (detention correction functions)
  • Also may hold assorted others
  • Separately assigned jail staff

29
Jail vs. Prison
  • Jail
  • County-level (mostly) by sheriff
  • Both convicted unconvicted persons
  • Incarceration for misdemeanor crimes (less than 1
    year confinement) (exceptions?)
  • Few rehabilitative services low priority
  • Prison
  • State or federal level by separate corrections
    department or system
  • Contain only convicted persons (?)
  • Incarceration for felony sentences

30
Public vs. Private Corrections
  • Corrections can only occur legally under
    governmental authorization
  • In last 25 years, private companies have entered
    corrections field
  • 7 of all prisoners are now in private
    facilities (6 of state 14 of federal
    prisoners)
  • How does privatization of prison work?
  • Construction leasing of facility
  • Management of facility
  • Contracting for services
  • Entire Institution

31
Public vs. Private Corrections
  • What are the arguments about privatization of
    corrections?
  • Cost and efficiency
  • Effectiveness and quality
  • Administrative flexibility and change
  • Accountability and Legal issues
  • Who are the players in privatized corrections?
  • 14 companies in U.S. largest Correctional
    Corp. of America (CCA) also GEO Group
    (Wackenhut Corrections), Cornell Corrections.
  • May provide prison, jail, medical, or other
    facilities
  • Also very involved in juvenile corrections

32
State vs. Federal Corrections
  • At state level, have 50 different correction
    systems, with great variation across states
  • All felony imprisonments are state responsibility
  • Difficult to describe the average, because states
    vary so much ? 31 security levels of prisons
    maximum-medium-minimum supermax
  • greater use of imprisonment in southern states
  • Greater use of privatized corrections in South
  • At federal level, have one correction system
  • Used only for federal felony imprisonments
  • 5 security levels(?) (AdMax High Medium Low
    minimum) (4 FCIs 1 FPC)
  • Also Federal Jails (MDCs) and Medical Centers
    (MCFPs)

33
Mens vs. Womens Prisons
  • See the description in the book for male prisons
  • Note female prison population is growing faster
    than male, still only about 7 of all prison
    inmates.
  • Prison facilities are visibly different
  • Female offenders are very different kinds of
    persons
  • Most sentences for property or drug crimes
  • Inmate organization is very different
  • Female prisons generally have fewer programs

34
Security Levels in Prisons
  • See the description in the book of levels
  • Distribution of inmates in state prisons (2004)
  • Minimum Security 34.4
  • Medium Security 37.1
  • Maximum/high-close 21.5
  • Super-Maximum 0.5
  • Unclassified 6.5

35
The current trends in prison policy?
  • Will the next several decades in institutional
    corrections look like more of the same (as in
    the past several decades)?
  • Will prisoner populations continue to grow?
  • Will there be more privatization of corrections?
  • Will we continue to use mandatory sentences and
    releases?

36
Recent Trends
37
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40
Jail Architecture
41
The Big House Prison
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