...What are the best practices for services and programming available for prisoners? Introduction There are about 2.3 million people currently in the nation’s prisons and jails. (that would be 1 in 10 Americans). The US leads the world in mass incarceration. The US has more people in jail than China and Russia combined. (Stern, 2014). The majority of people would relate punishment with prison. And they are not far from the truth as prisons are facilities that give retribution to people for their bad choices, and deter them from committing new crimes. However, the majority of prisons also offer social services to prisoners so when they leave, they have the needed instruments to reintegrate into society. Most prisons offer numerous programs...
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...and Rehabilitation (CDCR) has been a problem since the 1980’s. In October 2006 Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger declared a state of emergency for all prisons in California, stating that the overcrowding in the prisons had become a problem for both inmates and staff members (Schwarzenegger, 2006, 1). Because of this a three-judge court in the Plata and Coleman v. Schwarzenegger (2010) case issued an Opinion and Order stating that California had to limit the prison population to 137.5 percent of the rated capacity of the California prisons by the end of 2013 (Plata and Coleman v. Schwarzenegger, 2010,1-4). Further the Brown v. Plata (2011) case denied the state of California’s appeal of the three judge court’s decision (Meehan, 2014, cited in Gardiner and Fiber-Ostrow, 2014, 188). In 2011 Governor Jerry Brown signed Assembly Bill 109 (AB 109) which stated that non-serious, non-violent, non-sex related, low level inmates would no longer go to prison allowing for an opportunity to serve their sentences in county jails and/or mandatory supervision instead of prison (CDCR, 2013a, 1). Plata & Coleman v. Schwarzenegger (2009) Governor Schwarzenegger (2006, 1) stated...
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...2012 The Stanford Prison Study In the early 70’s, twenty-four male college students with no prior criminal history were selected to participate in a prison study that was conducted on the campus grounds of Stanford University. Before being placed in the stimulated prison that was designed by Zimbardo and his colleagues for this particular study, each student was given the option to be a prison guard or prisoner. The prison study was originally scheduled to last approximately two weeks. During the prison study researchers immediately observed the behavior changes of the guards and prisoners. For instance, the morning of the second day of the study prisoners began to rebel by taking off their stocking caps, ripping off their numbers, barricading themselves inside their cells, and not following the guards instructions. As a result, the guards became very aggressive and abusive toward the rebelling prisoners which resulted in them abusing their power to harass and intimidate prisoners. The guard’s abusive behaviors left the prisoners feeling extremely stressed, depressed, and experiencing episodes of anxiety (excessive crying and other negative emotions). In fact, several prisoners who experienced severe negative emotions were immediately released from the study. In view of these facts, the prison study only lasted a total of six days due to the guards, the authority figures, abusing their power and slowly dehumanizing their prisoners. In the end, the study demonstrated that bad...
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...discusses how the government has increased “mandatory sentencing” using “aggressive initiatives” for drug related crimes. Additionally, these government implemented sentencing guidelines have made the prison population grow expediential. This new population growth has additionally made correctional administrators see the need for drug treatment programs within prisons. Furthermore, the authors explain the “Six common barriers to develop effective treatment programs in correctional settings.” (Farabee, Prendergast, Cartier, Wexler, Knight, Anglin) The purpose of the study: The purpose of this study was to show how to...
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...country, all struggle with different types of harm, towards the inmates and the staff. According to a study done by Small, et al. (2005), 40% of federal inmates reported that they have used illicit illegal drugs while in prison and 11% of the illicit drug use was from injection drug use. In Correctional Health Care Services, it is important to analyze how prisons implement harm reduction in the inmate communities. Unsterile needle use is a very prominent ethical issue among prisons across the world, should prisoners be given sterile needles...
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...The U.S will continue to need correctional officers to watch over prisoners. Correctional and bailiff officer's employment is projected to grow by 4 percent from 2014 to 2024, this is slower than the average for all occupations. Changes in the criminal law can have a large effect on how people will be arrested and are in jail each year. Higher cost are keeping people in prison, and many state governments have moved towards laws requiring shorter prison sentences and to move them to an alternative prison. In the courtrooms bailiffs will still be needed. North Carolina has a total of 56 state prisons and 1 federal prison. According to Difference Between.com, a state prison is maintained and looked after by state authorities and that most of...
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...After leaving a southeast Atlanta client to die bound and gagged on the bathroom floor of his apartment, Tamieka Gamble, a 38-year-old prostitute, has been sentenced to life in prison. Police found the 64-year-old Edward Jowers dead in his Atlanta apartment on August 9th, 2010. Prosecutors of criminal law stated that Tamieka Gamble and her pimp and boyfriend, Mark Ross, visited Jowers at his apartment and tied him up with cables. Afterwards, they covered his head with linens and repeatedly slashed his back with a knife as they demanded money. After the property manager did a welfare check at Jowers' home, he and the police discovered Jowers' body. Investigators soon discovered that the pair had demanded money from Jowers, so robbery was the...
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...The Prison Rape Elimination Act was passed to help victims in prison dealing with getting abused. This law works on local, federal, and state prison systems. Rape in prisons unfortunately happens a lot because inmates will be locked up for a long time with no desires fulfilled. Being in confinement without being able to have connection with anyone will drive people insane causing them to act irrationally. I believe the law passed will help examine why rapes happens and when they get chances to act on urges. Getting all of this information will help prison guards plan and have a better watch for such scenarios happening. We can examine trends to try and make it harder for inmates to continue rape. More staffing in areas rape has occurred can...
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... In the 1971 documentary, “Quiet Rage”, psychologist Philip Zimbardo conducted a prison experiment at Stanford University aiming to gain knowledge in regards to the development of norms, roles, labels, and social expectations in a prison environment. Throughout this experiment Zimbardo lost control of the situation as the participants lost their own identities and became greatly involved with the roles that they were expected to act upon. As a result Zimbardo had to terminate the experiment before the study was completed due to unethical issues. The experiment was unethical, but it was a necessity in order to have acquired this beneficial knowledge that we possess today even though the trade off was inappropriate for the participants. Numerous reasons exist to why the experiment has violated the ethical standards. For example, the students who had played the role of prisoners were treated unethically by forcing them to clean the toilet with their bare hands, and were placed in total confinement of spaces that were only standing room for more than 24hrs. But why would the prisoners blindly follow the guards? According to Giddens, the size of a group affects the “quality of interaction and the capability of the group in accomplishing certain tasks” (Giddens 132). The more the prisoners the more likely they would conform to the guards even though the orders were harsh and unethical. One study that supports the theory of conformity was the experiment Asch Task, where participants...
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...Explanations of how and why crime occurs can be divided into theories that either put emphasis on the process within the person either being biological, physiological or psychological (Including cognitive and personality) or those that relate to a person’s interactions and environment. Essential to understand and acknowledge different theories and explanations for the cause of crime within a much broader framework. This essay will aim to compare and contrast both psychological and sociological factors of the causes of criminality Psychology is a study of individual characteristics or qualities such as personality, perception, intelligence, reasoning, thought and imagination which it uses to explain human functioning and behavior (Williams,...
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...Prison reform, the endeavor of enhancing the conditions within detainment facilities likewise to set up a more helpful punitive framework or actualize helper to detainment; helps the detainees to get ready better for their second life after their time serving in jail. At the NAACP's 106th national tradition, on July 15, 2015; Mr. President Obama recorded a bundle of reasons that the United States ought to change the criminal equity framework. What's more, a few reasons that the legislature will look more into the American groups and attempt to give more open door and more rights to every one of the general population in the country. President Obama has officially investigating the circumstance. The quantities of steps are “signing the Fair...
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...Describe a Case The school to prison pipeline is a societal issue. The school to prison pipeline is also an issue in the field of social work as well. My case is based from Wilson article, (2014), Turning off the School-to-Prison Pipeline. As a social worker I will encounter many situations regarding adolescents having difficulties staying in school. The alarming factor of the school to prison pipeline is the disparity between racial groups, specifically black students. Wilson article discuss many issues with the school to prison pipeline and solutions. Research suggest that community interventions are the best solution to the school to prison pipeline (Wilson, 2014). For example, training teachers on different cultures and back grounds,...
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...and economic backgrounds. This also includes prisoners held in state correctional facilities across the United States of America. In 2012, there were an estimated 356,268 inmates with severe mental illnesses in U.S. prison and jails compared to the 35,000 mentally ill individuals who were in state psychiatric hospitals. (Cited) “CASE STUDY”: In 1999, a thirty-five year old man from Ohio was sentence to prison. He served six years for his crime and then later served an additional four years for “failure to register”. While in prison, his children were no longer speaking to him, friends deserted him, and he lost his mother and father. This “rehabilitated” convicted felon is now forty-nine years old, homeless, jobless, and has no marketable work skills. He has contemplated suicide on multiple occasions and has often thought about returning back to prison; purposely....
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...Key Statistics: • Only 14.5% of youth discharged were recommitted to custody of juvenile corrections or sentenced to adult prison within two years. (Compared to 36.7% for New Jersey) • Only 7% of youth discharged were incarcerated as an adult within two years. (Compared to 10% for Michigan) • Only 8.5% of youth discharged from Missouri youth corrections facilities were sentenced to adult prison within three years. (Compared to 23.4% in Arizona, 20.8% in Indiana, and 26% in Maryland) • Assaults by one juvenile against another are four-and-a-half times less common per capita in Missouri. • Assaults by a juvenile against a staff member are thirteen times less common per capita in Missouri. • Use of any form of mechanical restraint was...
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...Women’s Prison By Nick Capstone Research Design May 7, 2007 Introduction This study aims to examine the outcomes of an intensive, innovative educational program for under-educated women in prison. Traditional education programs in prisons are somewhat lacking. Usually, prisons only offer lackluster GED programs. When vocational programs are offered, they are often for out-of-date professions or extremely gendered (Brewster and Sharp 2002). This program would seek to improve the educational and release outcome of women using intensive instruction and low student-teacher ratios. The need for information on the backgrounds, lives and needs of incarcerated women is evident. Though they currently only make up 7.0% of prisoners held in state and federal facilities, women’s incarceration rates are increasing more quickly than men’s. From 1995-2005 the number of women incarcerated increased 57%, compared to 34% for men (Bureau of Justice Statistics 2005). Approximately 4 out of 5 women in prison have minor dependent children, and the majority of them have sole custody (Belknap 2007). Relationships with their children are often strained by incarceration. The focus of the study will be on the changes women experience within the prison environment, rather than their post-release outcomes. Some of the changes that these women experience within the prison system may affect their likelihood of receiving parole and their behaviors once outside of prison. ...
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