Soc 329 Parenti Chapters 8-11 Prisons Parenti focuses on the violence that characterized the early...
-
Upload
derick-bates -
Category
Documents
-
view
213 -
download
1
Transcript of Soc 329 Parenti Chapters 8-11 Prisons Parenti focuses on the violence that characterized the early...
Soc 329 Parenti
Chapters 8-11 Prisons
Parenti focuses on the violence that characterized the early massive growth of prisons as “get tough” policies emerged across the country and how the violence caused by the growth became the pretext for more growth.
The growth of bureaucracy, gangs, and torture has changed the forms of this violence over the last decade and the economic collapse has put a spotlight on prisons again.
Soc 329 Parenti
Chap 8 The Rise of Big House Nation
Two sources of the imprisonment binge:
1. The “rational management” of surplus pops
2. By-product of conservative “get tough” policies (plus backlash against prisoners rights
movement)
Attica (1971) as turning point
Soc 329 Parenti
Chap 9 Prison as Abattoir
As prisons grew (and partly result of rights backlash)
prison admins sought and got removal of virtually all oversight of prisons – by courts, media, etc.
From conservative point of view, prisoner rights movement
led to riots (like Attica) and reversal required crackdown on prisoners rights (make prison conditions much
worse!) and this was ugly – and hidden from public view
Soc 329 Parenti
As imprisonment grew prisons soon became overcrowded in states across the country -- the numbers of prisoners grew much faster than new prisons were built.
(get tough while cutting taxes)
Admins and guards found that provoking violence among prisoners (usually against each other, but riots worked too) was most effective way to get budget increases.
Something like this also happened with juvie prisons (like the Calif Youth Authority & NY juvie system)The more they deteriorated, the higher the budgets
Soc 329 Parenti
Chap 10 Balkans in a Box
Prison management style became divide and conquer
The use of rape to terrorize/divide prisoners --and manipulating race/ethnic/gang conflicts
These institutionalize terror as a way to control prisoners – SHUs are the ultimate torture of prisoners
Racial skewing contributed to this – targeting minorities for high rates of imprisonment
Soc 329 Parenti
The growth of gangs in the US has been largely a by-product of this --
Prisons use race/ethnicity to divide/control prisoners
Prisoners form gangs to defend against violence
Gangs spread to outside when prisoners are released and
become institutionalized in the illicit economies of the badlands – workforce going in and out of prison.
Soc 329 Parenti
Chap 11 Prison Industrial Complex?
From NIMBY to begging for prisons -- Why? Some econ revitalization for small towns etc.
Policy: overall not a replacement for military spending
What drives it economically? Usual critical explan: Revitalization? Private prisons? Prison labor?
Soc 329 Parenti
Not econ revit - “tiny islands in a sea of stagnation”
Private prisons - inefficiency and political opposition (private prisons now pretty much a failure) Prison labor - “slave labor is inefficient”
So Parenti concludes that the binge is driven by the overall assault on the working class
Soc 329 Parenti
Recommendations -- do less! (this is now common among critical crims)
Epilogue – at the time (1999) the binge was leveling off
Then Sep 11, 2001 followed by a new war on terrorism
And the binge accelerated again now driven by politics
Then the economic collapse and state bankruptcies