incarceration
Caught, by Marie Gottschalk
Marie Gottschalk describes an American penal system that has all but abandoned any real attempt to rehabilitate its inmates.
reviewed by Timothy Mark Renick
Free on the inside
Joshua Dubler shows up at a maximum-security prison as a budding ethnographer. He becomes a man captured by friendships.
A month of hunger
The hunger strike among California prison inmates is a month old today.
The state's corrections department maintains that the strike is a ploy to free up gangs to do business behind bars. But the longer this thing goes, the more ridiculous that sounds.
Lifeline to kids: A shift to group mentoring
Experts say mentoring works best one on one. But Lewis Haley found such a need for mentors that he bent the rules.
Talking about incarceration
In a recent interview with the Century, Michelle Alexander, the civil rights lawyer and author of The New Jim Crow, wonders about the stigma in many churches attached to people who have been recently released from prisons. “The deep irony,” she says,” is that the very folks who ought to be the most sensitive to the demonization of the ‘despised,’ the prisoners, have been complicit and silent.”
But the kinds of conversations that Alexander’s book seems to demand are very difficult to have--in churches and outside them.
The price of prisons
Americans seem to relish putting their fellow citizens behind bars. Lately, some conservatives have begun to see this as a problem.
Criminal injustice: Michelle Alexander on racism and incarceration
"The U.S has created a vast legal system for racial and social control, unprecedented in world history. Yet we claim to be colorblind."
by Amy Frykholm
Put away: Solitary confinement
The Geneva Convention forbids excessive use of solitary confinement. Yet the U.S. persists in using it as punishment.