What does it mean when someone says Prison Industrial Complex or PIC? Have you ever heard this phrase before? If you have never heard this before then it is likely you have no reason to be concerned with it or that you are unaffected by it. The Prison Industrial Complex is a term used to describe the overlapping interests of government and industry that use surveillance, policing, and imprisonment as solutions to economic, social and political problems. (1) Prisons have become a new form of enslavement for minorities. The PIC helps people who have racial, economic, and social advantages keep those advantages and maintain their authority. But how do they use the PIC to do this you ask? Well, they create mass media outlets that keep these stereotypes …show more content…
in the minds of society. Stereotypes for colored people, homeless people, homosexuals, immigrants and other minorities just to name some.
They portray them as criminal delinquent or deviant. It is a pinwheel of cash being spread around, and at the center of it is the criminal, who has traditionally been African-American. Prisons have private ownership usually and that person wants the prison to be as full as possible so they can make the most out of their investment. Sometimes, private companies will invest in prisons and make huge profits off the prison and in return extra money is also made by the police forces that arrest the “criminals”. Prisons were created as a place to send criminals for rehabilitation with the hopes of returning them to society better so they wouldn’t commit that crime again; depending on the severity of the crime they committed. Now, prisons are just a form of exploitation of the poor people and minorities. Do you know how many people profit from one person’s incarceration? The Police Officer who arrest you gets paid. He has a quota to meet and if he does he’ll get a bonus. The Judge who hears your case, he gets paid for each trial he proceeds over. The parole officer gets paid. As long as there are people who go on parole he will always have a …show more content…
job. The Government makes money from the prisoners by taxing them while they’re imprisoned and they get free labor off of them. The person who owns the prison, whether man or woman, has the ability to make more or less money depending on the capacity of people in their prison. So the greater the amount of people sentenced their profit will increase proportionately. Angela Davis said “Homelessness, unemployment, drug addiction, mental illness, and illiteracy are only a few of the problems that disappear from public view when the human beings contending with them are relegated to cages.” Angela Davis is an American political activist, scholar, and author. She co-founded Critical Resistance, an organization working to abolish the prison-industrial complex. She has written on the subject of the prison Industrial complex. Prisons don’t solve problems within communities, but instead make them disappear.
And as someone on the outside looking in it seems like the problem has been solved. This practice of disappearing people has become big business. When prisons disappear human beings in order to convey the illusion of solving social problems, penal infrastructures must be created to accommodate a rapidly swelling population of caged people. (2) The day to day operations of prisons used to be done by the government; now they are performed by private corporations. Their actions are starting to reflect that of the military industrial complex. The dividends that accrue from investment in the punishment industry, like those that accrue from investment in weapons production, only amount to social destruction.
(2) It is estimated that two million people are incarcerated within the network of Jails and Prisons within the United States. Of that two million, at least 70% are people of color. A large number of offenders have been charged with non-violent drug offenses and often receive harsher sentences then white counterparts who have committed violent offenses. It is rarely acknowledged that the fastest growing group of prisoners are black women and that Native American prisoners are the largest group per capita. (2) Angela Davis said “Short of major wars, mass incarceration has been the most thoroughly implemented government social program of our time." (2)
Should prisons in the United States be for profit? How do for profit prisons benefit the United States? Would inmates rather be in private or public correctional centers? What kind of affects does this have on taxpayers? What are the pros and cons of profit prisons? These are many of the questions that are brought up when discussing for profit prison systems. There are different perspectives that can be taken when it comes to talking about for profit prisons. This paper will discuss some of the ways that the United States has started to become for profit and why it has happened. Finally, this paper will give an opinion of whether or not for profit prisons should be dominant over public facilities.
Correctional program writing nowadays is at a level of efficiency that surpasses earlier outlooks. In territories all over the United States, there are several curriculums that use research-based curriculums to teach, instruct, and inspire inmates. Disappeared are the days of hit-or-miss execution of curriculums that seemed good, but over and over again just occupied time for the inmates. The previous evolution happened for several reasons (Corrections Today, 2010). The largest wake-up demands was the claim composed around thirty years ago. The statement made was not anything works in corrections systems, mainly rehabilitation. Even though this commonly revealed report was taken from its context, it did in detail carry some notice to the mystery that several penitentiaries were not operational as change
Mandatory minimums for controlled substances were first implemented in the 1980s as a countermeasure for the hysteria that surrounded drugs in the era (“A Brief History,” 2014). The common belief was that stiff penalties discouraged people from using drugs and enhanced public safety (“A Brief History,” 2014). That theory, however, was proven false and rather than less illegal drug activity, there are simply more people incarcerated. Studies show that over half of federal prisoners currently incarcerated are there on drug charges, a 116 percent percentage rise since 1970 (Miles, 2014). Mass incarceration is an ever growing issue in the United States and is the result of policies that support the large scale use of imprisonment on
We live in a society today filled with crime and fear. We are told not to go out after a certain hour, always move in groups, and even at times advised to carry a weapon on ourselves. There is only one thing that gives us piece of mind in this new and frightening world we live in: the American penal system. We are taught when growing up to believe that all of the bad people in the world are locked up, far out of sight and that we are out of reach of their dangerous grasp. Furthermore, the murderers and rapists we watch on television, we believe once are caught are to be forgotten and never worried about again. We wish on them the most horrible fates and to rot in the caged institution they are forced to call their new home. But, where do we draw the line of cruelty to those who are some of the cruelest people in our country? And what happens when one of this most strict and strongest institution our nation has breaks down? What do we do when this piece of mind, the one thing that lets us sleep at night, suddenly disappears? This is exactly what happened during and in the after effects of the Attica prison riot of 1971. The riot created an incredibly immense shift and change not only in the conditions of prisons, but also in the security we feel as American citizens both in our penal system and American government. The Attica prison riot brought about a much-needed prison reform in terms of safety and conditions for inmates, which was necessary regardless of the social backlash it created and is still felt today.
In recent years, there has been controversy over mass incarceration rates within the United States. In the past, the imprisonment of criminals was seen as the most efficient way to protect citizens. However, as time has gone on, crime rates have continued to increase exponentially. Because of this, many people have begun to propose alternatives that will effectively prevent criminals from merely repeating their illegal actions. Some contend that diversion programs, such as rehabilitation treatment for drug offenders, is a more practical solution than placing mentally unstable individuals into prison. By helping unsteady criminals regain their health, society would see an exceptional reduction in the amount of crimes committed. Although some
The disproportionate numbers of African Americans in the prison system is a very serious issue, which is not usually discussed in its totality. However, it is quite important to address the matter because it ultimately will have an effect on African Americans as a whole.
On an average nearly 688,000 prisoners are released back into society, and of which includes 433,000 prisoner's waiting for trial and convictions, and the remaining percentage of prisoner's are serving sentences for minor and non-violent crimes, although, in the attempt to ensure public safety. Prison overcrowding continues to be a grave concern to the safety and welfare of the general public in California today because consequently the percentage of juvenile offenders detained represents 12,000 for technical violations, and 3,000 juveniles are detained for status offenses costing the taxpayers on an average $31,286 annually, and currently, the number of offender’s incarcerated in State and Federal prisons today is an astounding 2.4 million
The overpopulation in the prison system in America has been an on going problem in the United States for the past two decades. Not only does it effect the American people who are also the tax payers to fund all of the convicts in prisons and jails, but it also effects the prisoners themselves. Family members of the prisoners also come into effect. Overpopulation in prison cause a horrible chain reaction that causes nothing but suffering and problems for a whole bunch people. Yet through all the problems that lye with the overpopulation in prisons, there are some solutions to fix this ongoing huge problem in America.
In today’s society, we often find people who have a bias against the correctional system. We find these people to have no credible source besides the information the media proposes, third party information, or if they themselves have been locked up. Whether we sit and listen to them preach about the corruptness is up to us.
his paper will seek to analyze the privatization of prisons in the American Criminal Justice Penal System. “Privatization” refers to both the takeover of existing public facilities by private operators and the building and operation of new and additional prisons by for-profit companies (Cheung, 2004). The developments of private prison were a huge result of mass incarceration in America. Therefore, this paper will first evaluate how private prisons are considered to be a solution to the problem of overcrowded prisons in the United States. Next, it will examine private prisons to investigate rather it was an enormous solution to the mass incarceration problem in the criminal justice system. Furthermore, it will seek to understand the idea that private prisons are less expensive to operate than public facilities operated by the state. Honestly, it will terminate the claim that private prisons cause an enormous economic growth, as development projects, in rural areas throughout the United States. Also, I will explain how the private prison industry has tremendously affected the black male and female rate of incarceration. Therefore, private prisons are not a feasible to the issue of mass incarceration; however, it does obstruct the reformation of mass incarceration by reinforcing the very same principles of the already faulty criminal justice system’s ideologies.
A person’s social class plays a big role in determining who and for how long a convicted felon spends in prison. For example, a white kid from an influential family, convicted for the same crime as a kid from Projects may serve a fraction of the time in prison, simply because of his financial status. Another major issue within our current prison system is how illegal drugs are classified by the Justice Department and the level of punishment associated with these drugs. According to “Facts about the Prison System in the U.S,” how we classify illegal drugs and the punishment can be extremely unfair. For example, a person arrested with having five grams crack cocaine may receive the same charge or conviction as a person found with five hundred grams of powder cocaine. I believe, no matter how much or what type of cocaine you are caught with, the charge should be consistently applied. The bigger issue is with how the unfair and unjust laws are written. Many of today’s laws are written by people who are rich and they have little consideration for the people who will be affected by racially and culturally biased laws. Consequently, the people who are hit hardest by these laws are generally poor and minorities. In other words, African- Americans and minorities are discriminated against within the criminal justice system and the proof lies in the number of minorities incarcerated. For example, according to “Facts about the Prison System in the U.S,” African-Americans make up fourteen percent of the drug users within the United States; however, African-Americans make-up thirty-seven percent of the prison population, which has been convicted and sentenced to prison for using or having illegal drugs. This demonstrates that African-Americans are stereotyped as criminals, treated unequally, and much more likely to be arrested, convicted, and sent to
In 21st-century America, detainment is turning into a multibillion dollar industry every year, and will keep on increasing in extension in the coming decades. The “prison industrial complex" incorporates not just those organizations specifically included in conveying discipline (courts, adjustments,
Firstly, in order to gain a better understanding of the problems that plague or correctional system we must fully understand the enormous overcrowding problem that exist in the majority of or state and federal prisons. Since 1980 the prison population has quadrupled and only the numb...
The first issue that I would like to address is the overcrowding issues in prisons. In my opinion, overcrowding issues are the biggest issues in our correctional system that concerns every citizen. Running a prison required money, resources and manpower, with overcrowding issues, the government would have no choice but to increase the number of correctional facilities, privatized prisons and increasing manpower. According to (Levitt, 1996), “The incarceration rate in the United States has more than tripled in the last two decades. At year-end 1994 the United States prison population exceeded one million. Annual government outlays on prisons are roughly $40 billion per year. The rate of imprisonment in the United States is three to four times greater than most European countries.” (p.1). Overcrowding issues are not only affect prisons but the society as a whole as well. The reason is simply because prison population directly refl...
Mass incarceration is a consequence of criminalization that negatively impacts the solidarity of communities. When civilians see all the incarceration in their communities they become distressed and agitated. They find this act unfair and want justice so they become violent in their own ways. This is very common in African Americans wanting justice and it becomes an unhealthy pattern that becomes the governments problem because essentially everything connects to each other and falls in place coordinating with each other. “Human Rights Watch reported in 2000 that, in seven states, African Americans constitute 80 to 90 percent all of drug offenders sent to prison (Alexander, 99). This quote used from the book proves African Americans commit more offenses to be incarcerated and is becomes unsustainable when the statistics show these percentages and makes people assume that black people are the only ones committing these crimes. A great example of this would-be neighbors calling 911 on every little situation to occur instead of talking to the neighbor beforehand. They just assume there is chaos and would rather get the police involved instead of attempting to resolve the situation