Compare And Contrast The Stanford Prison Experiment And Abu Ghraib Experiment

1106 Words3 Pages

The Stanford Prison Experiment and Abu Ghraib Prison Scandal
One of the ways that the Stanford Prison Experiment was different than the Abu Ghraib Prison Scandal is that in the Stanford Prison Experiment they had roles. Half of the boys were given, the role of prisoners and the other half of the boys was given the role of the prisoner guards. This meant that the half that was guards had the power, whereas the prisoners were powerless because they had to do whatever the guards told them to do. Therefore, since the guards in the experiment knew that they had a lot power, they then began to eventually abuse their power as the experiment went on against the prisoners. For example, in the experiment the guard hit the prisoner with a nightstick out …show more content…

Whereas, in the Abu Ghraib, they used all types of people to study from mentally unstable to mentally stable people. The fifth way, that The Sanford Prison Experiment was different than the Abu Ghraib Prison Scandal was that the prisoners in the experiment had a chance to go home to be with their families but the ones in the Abu Ghraib couldn’t leave because they were captured prisoners. Another, way that the experiment differed from the scandal was that the prisoners in the experiment were so conditioned to being a prisoner that when the guards asked them if they would forfeit the money that they had earned from the experiment to use to gain parole, the prisoners said that they would. However, if they would’ve just quit the experiment they would’ve came out with the same outcome. But the prisoners in the experiment didn’t because they felt powerless to resist. Then again, in the Abu Ghraib Scandal the American Soldiers abused the prisoners purposely by inflicting humiliation and pain as a punishment for their behaviors. Aside, from that the Sanford experiment had …show more content…

For example, in both events the guards would strip their inmates of their clothes, and take their beds out of their cells because of their rebellious behavior. Also, they both had laws that were established by the prison directors and enforced by the guards. Conversely, both these events went through a period of psychoanalysis where they were presented a problem and had to use free association and resistance to get info out of the prisoners. For example, in both these events the prison had people to come and talk to the prisoners about what was taking place. They also did this to prove their theory that different environments influence the behavior of people, whether you are mentally sane or not. Similarly, the attitudes towards between the guards versus the prisoners in both cases were the same. The guards attitudes were as if they were untouchable only because they knew that the prisoners couldn’t do anything about what was taking place inside the prisons. Moreover, in both the Sanford Prison Experiment and the Abu Ghraib Prison Scandal the prisoners experienced the bystander effect. This is because a higher authority inside the prison just sat there and watched the prisoners get tortured, beaten, humiliated, raped, and abused without trying to interfere to try to stop or calm the reckless behavior. Nevertheless, the motivation levels in both the experiment and the

Open Document