Name Professor Course Date How private prisons can positively affect state budgets and the economy overall Prison privatization: the United States contracts third party individuals to offer places for physical confinement of humans. despite numerous criticism and flaws that may have been exposed in private prisons, there are benefits enjoyed by states in relation to revenues and economic spur in general that is brought about by prison privatization (Price & Morris, 2). This document will discuss some of the benefits that are enjoyed by the state economies when private prisons come up.…
With the ever-increasing prison population here in America, we find that we are running out of room in state run prisons. How do we accommodate the influx of prisons? you may ask, well one way is to house them in For-Profit Prisons. For-Profit Prisons are a way for the state to house prisoners in a way that saves money, since For-Profit Prisons are essentially a privatized business. However, there leads to questions being asked, such as, Are For-Profit Prisons effective?…
The article’s main point focuses on how the private prison system is directly influencing the amount of people being incarcerated. While at the same time, she argues that the corporations are…
It is also a state of mind” (Schlosser,1998). “The lure of big money is corrupting the nation's criminal-justice system, replacing notions of public service with a drive for higher profits. “The eagerness of elected officials to pass "tough-on-crime" legislation combined with their unwillingness to disclose the true costs of these laws has encouraged all sorts of financial improprieties” (Schlosser,1998). “The inner workings of the prison-industrial complex can be observed in the state of New York, where the prison boom started, transforming the economy of an entire region; in Texas and Tennessee, where private prison companies have thrived; and in California, where the correctional trends of the past two decades have converged and reached extremes(Schlosser,1998).” The obsession with locking people up in the United States does not come cheap.…
Private prison employees often have stock in their company or receive some type of profit-incentive, and as a result, this profit motive can directly influence their professional decisions (i.e. longer sentences and no goodtime) (Anderson, 2009). Since staffing accounts for 70% of the prison budge, private prisons often cut costs in labor (Blakely & Bumphus, 2004). Private prisons employee 15% fewer guards per prison than public prisoners (Anderson, 2009). As a result, violence among inmates and assaults on correctional officers is more frequent in private prisons.…
Interestingly enough, the author also offers a counter argument for the theory of “New Slavery,” by discussing how the socially accepted goal of prisons has been to incapacitate prisoners and therefore, only a small amount of them actually work while they are incarcerated. In addition, the author contends that the principal reason private interests fail to exploit prisoner labor is because they cannot out compete big firms at setting up satellite work…
As of today the United States has a total of 2.3 million people in 1,719 state prisons, 102 federal prisons, 942 juvenile correctional facilities, 3,283 local jails, and 79 Indian Country jails as well as in military prisons, immigration detention facilities, civil commitment centers, and prisons in the U.S. Territories. Overcrowding prisons and not enough staff are becoming a serious issue in America. Everyday more citizens are committing crimes that lead them in either prison or jails. And overcrowding prisons lead to having four to five inmates to a cell, which being that close to other criminals can cause violent behavior. It can also cause lack of privacy, which can cause mental health problems and possibly even increase suicide rates and self-harm.…
Since 1989 big private corporations such as Corrections Corporation of America and GEO have been funneling money into politics with more than $10 million directly to candidates and roughly $25 million in lobbying. These big companies are not the usual suspects of lobby efforts like their counterparts Big Pharma and Big Oil, these companies are the two biggest contributors to the third, silent influencers of American politics, Private Prisons (Cohen). Private prisons take responsibility for sixteen percent of federal prisoners and six percent of state prisons according to the ACLU. With a prison population of 2,220,300 Americans, private prisons are becoming one of the largest industries in the nation (Bureau of Justice Statistics).…
(Lee, 2012) When compared to Canada and countries in Europe, the United States hands down longer prison sentences for the same crimes. (Liptak, 2008) Private prisons help contribute to every one of these statics. Mandatory sentences are supported by these companies which lead to more non-violent offenders…
How can private prisons be a Billion-dollar business? It’s simple supply and demand. The prisoners are the supply and filing the prison is the demand. Let’s say 30 prisoners is what a private prison needs to make a profit, but they only have 15 prisoners. To make up for the shortage of prisoners they set up fines and increase the sentence of the current prisoner’s.…
The sole purpose of prison is to punish criminals for crimes they have committed, protect citizens from crime, and rehabilitate those individuals to be honest, law-abiding citizens once they are released back into the public. Wilbert Rideau, author of “Why Prisons Don’t Work”, was in the Louisiana State Penitentiary and has first-hand experience with how the prison system works. Prison is the punishment, but the punishments within the prison are inhumane and ineffective. High re-offense rates show that the public is not being protected from criminals; nor, are they rehabilitating those individuals to be productive citizens. Prisons are harming the individuals inside of them more than helping, prisons do not work.…
The major arguments against privatization are cost, insurance, control, and corruption. Private sector prisons claim they can provide the same services as government-ran prisons for cheaper the cost. However, after research and studies conducted there has been no significant difference found. The only way private…
The Problem with For-Profit Prison Private or for profit prisons are facilities that are contracted with the local, state or federal government to operate correctional facilities. In the 1980’s President Reagan said that government was the problem and proposed privatizing many institutions (Selman & Leighton, 2010). According to the American Civil Liberties Union, currently about 6% of state prisoners and 16% of federal inmates are in a privatized institutions. The most common argument in favor of for-profit prisons is that private industry is far more efficient than government and thus can operate facilities more more cheaply than the government.…
“It’s an evil. Solitary confinement is the most torturous experience a human being can be put through in prison. It’s punishment without ending” –Albert Woodfox, served 43 years in Solitary Confinement. “Basically I lived in a tomb… I lost the will to live sitting in that tomb…you’re dead, you’re just dead.”…
Prison Overcrowding Name: Sepehr Sadrameli Instructor: Dr.Dionne Peniston Course: Courts Systems & Practices Fall 2016 Identification of the problem Prison overcrowding is a common problem in different countries throughout the world including the United States. It refers to a phenomenon that occurs when demand for prison spaces in a particular jurisdiction exceeds the capacity of the institutions (Hough, Allen & Solomon, 2008). Prison overcrowding occurs when courts in a country when the rate of incarceration exceeds the rate at which the justice system releases prisoners, or the prisoners die thus freeing up space for new entrants.…