The prison is the most opaque institution of the State which means prison management forms any part of the ... and their corresponding punishments today.
the use of imprisonment as a form of punishment is relatively recent. It youth out of prison treating rather than punishing drug addicts
An “alternative to incarceration” is any kind of punishment other than time in prison or jail that can be given to a person who commits a crime.
Punishment is a form of redress of the moral imbalance caused by crime – inflicting on an offender a sanction that is in proportion to the harm he or she
effective deterrent than even draconian punishment. 2. Sending an individual convicted of a crime to prison isn't a very effective way to deter crime.
Ethics of Imprisonment: Essays in Criminal Justice Ethics. of punishment it is not the kind of punishment which I discuss in this thesis. Rather.
human—is denied every day to incarcerated people when the food made available to them functions as another form of punishment. A person sentenced to prison
24 avr. 2012 formations in the form of punishment at the end of the 18th century 'the birth of the prison' as the Foucault put it
It has not addressed why imprisonment rather than cheaper forms of corporal punishment
incarceration conviction crime punishment crimmigration Abstract The unprecedented growth of the penal system in the United States has motivated an expansive volume of research on the collateral consequences of punishment In this review we take stock of what is known about these
Individuals behind bars cannot commit additional crime — this is incarceration as incapacitation Before someone commits crime he or she may fear incarceration and thus refrain from committing future crimes — this is incarceration as deterrence “Sending an individual convicted of a crime to prison isn’t a very effective way to deter crime ”
Mass Incarceration and the Theory of Punishment Vincent Chiao Version Post-print/accepted manuscript Citation (published version) Vincent Chiao "Mass Incarceration and the Theory of Punishment" (2015) Criminal Law and Philosophy Publisher’s Statement This article has been reproduced with the permission of Springer International
Jurisprudence of Mass Incarceration 1 Introduction: OVERCOMING MASS INCARCERATION Jonathan Simon The impulse to punish has been described as a universal and its roots seem to lie deep within the psychology and perhaps biology1 of human beings2 but when we study punishment across different societies and
incarceration as essentially incompatible with life As for gender Sexton found that female prisoners often lamented the lack of consistency and routine in prison and they most often expressed narratives of punishment that were either low in both salience and severity (punishment as part of life) or high in both