Essay On Solitary Confinement

922 Words2 Pages

Morgan Le
Ms. Tierney
Intro To College Writing
12 May 2014
Solitary Confinement is Wrong
For a long time now, solitary confinement as a form of punishment, protective custody, and suicide watch has been viewed as controversial. Inmates are usually put into solitary confinement not from their crimes, but acts of violence committed in the prison. The practice involves placing people in complete social isolation for extended periods, for example, from days to decades. It’s costly to put inmates in the prison system which the money could be used on many other useful programs that’ll benefit society. The purpose of imprisonment plays no beneficial significance in a human’s overall well being. Especially, being locked in a small cell for most of the day can cause people to develop mental illness due to the lack of contact with others. A large portion of people who are held in solitary suffer from psychiatric problems or may develop them over time after being isolated. Even after being released most people still suffer from mental issues since prisons aren’t designed or equipped to serve as mental health facilities, and the needed treatment is often not even available. Many troubled people still remain trapped between criminal justice and mental health. Now in today's society many state policymakers are rethinking the system.
Being in solitary confinement comes at a cost that’s not sustainable. To place an inmate in solitary for a year would cost taxpayers about $75,000 per person, three times the price of less restrictive forms of detention. The money used for confinement is not spent on public services for the people who have been affected by incarceration. (Chen) Steven Hawkins argues in “Education vs. Incarceration” that money is ...

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...at's why a handful of them go straight back behind bars again just after being released. (Solitary Confinement Is Cruel and Ineffective)
Researchers have found that prisoners in solitary quickly become withdrawn, hypersensitive to sights and sounds, paranoid, and more prone to violence and hallucinations. A professor of psychology at the University of California, Santa Cruz, named Craig Haney has documented several cases of individuals with no prior history of mental illness who nonetheless developed mental disorders requiring medical treatment after long extended period of time in solitary confinement. As damaging as it is for healthy adults, they’re even worse for adolescents, whose brains are still in their final stages of development, and the mentally ill, who already struggle to maintain a solid grasp on reality. (Solitary Confinement Is Cruel and Ineffective)

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