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Despite lethal explosions of violence from within and critical
assaults from without, it seems certain that prisons will continue
to exist for the foreseeable future. Gordon Hawkins argues that
certain key issues which attend the use of imprisonment as a penal
method must be dealt with realistically. Beginning with a
discussion of the ideology of imprisonment and the principal lines
of criticism directed at it, Hawkins examines such issues as the
prisonization hypothesis (the theory that prisons serve as a
training ground for criminals), the role of the prison guard, work
in prisons, and the use of prisoners as research subjects for
medical experiments. He also deals with the prisoners' rights
movement and its implications for the future of prison
administration. Hawkins not only makes specific recommendations for
reform, he also carefully appraises the barriers which obstruct
their implementation.
Norval Morris and Gordon Hawkins's first premise is that our
criminal justice system is a moral busybody, unwisely extended
beyond its proper role of protecting persons and property. But they
go further and systematically cover the amount, costs, causes, and
victims of crime: the reduction of violence; the police;
corrections; juvenile delinquency; the function of psychiatry in
crime control; organized crime; and the uses of criminological
research. On each topic precise recommendations are made and
carefully defended.
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