Pros And Cons Of Supermaxes

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In the last three decades, the criminal justice system has moved towards a “get tough” approach towards imprisonment. Therefore, the creation of Supermaximum-security-prisons, or Supermaxes, was a direct result of this movement. Do supermaxes call into question human rights concerns? What is their end goal? Are they cost effective? These are a few of the questions I have had for years concerning supermaxes as every now and then, local and national media have highlighted its positives and negatives. Daniel Mears (2013) tries to answer these questions and further delves into the challenges faced by states.
Article Summary One of the most damaging aspects of Supermaxes is the extended isolation it facilitates. This extended isolation includes 23-hour-per day single cell confinement. Brief lockdowns are routinely used in prisons, but “seldom have those prisons operated on …show more content…

“It is difficult to identify any comprehensive, credible, empirical assessments of system-wide disorder and violence, the causes of that violence, and evidence that a select group of “worst of the worst” inmates contributed to it.” (Mears, 2013, p. 689) One can speculate the need for supermaxes sprung up from fear and so dramatic steps were taken to quell these fears. Walter Dickey, Federal Monitor for the Supermax Prison in Boscobel, Wisconsin noted, “I think one of the things that’s happened, at least in a lot of states, Wisconsin’s one of them, is I think we grossly exaggerated the need for the supermax prison and overbuilt it, and I think, not surprisingly, when you’ve got empty cells in a crowded prison system, you tend to fill them up.” (Mears, 2013, p. 689) Many are now realizing that even the reasoning behind supermaxes is unsound, why build a facility to constantly house prisoners for the potential against riots and prison violence? They seem to be more questions than answers on this

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