This is the history of the foundations of modern carceral
institutions in Ontario. Drawing on a wide range of previously
unexplored primary material - including the papers of prison
inspectors and officials and the correspondence of those who wrote
to the authorities - Peter Oliver provides a narrative and
interpretative account of the penal system in nineteenth-century
Ontario.
In a century of massive social change, the penal system remained
rural, local, decentralized, and resistant to transformations that
were affecting other areas of society. Despite the efforts of
reformers, neither the political elites nor Ontarians in general
paid much attention to the inadequacies of a system plagued by
neglect, penny-pinching, and the vagaries of local control. In the
1830s, the Kingston penitentiary and punishment by incarceration
became the cornerstones of the system, and these elements, however
flawed, dominated the Ontario correctional system until the late
twentieth century.
'Terror to Evil-Doers' focuses on the purposes and internal
management of particular institutions. By synthesizing a wealth of
new material into a comprehensive framework, Oliver's seminal study
lays the groundwork for future students and scholars of Canadian
history, criminology, and sociology.
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