Institutions from the 18th century, part of the custodial poor relief system.
Functioned as disciplinary training for capitalist production through forced labor.
Aimed to break working-class resistance and compel laborers to accept exploitative conditions.
Element of the Discipline technology of power within the Arc of Discipline.
Focused on replacing bad habits with virtuous ones, creating utility and docility.
Incorporates the Panopticon model that emphasizes surveillance and individual accountability.
A concept from Marx explaining the transition of social means of production into capital.
Historical process that dispossessed laborers, marking the pre-historic stage of capital.
A model representing the disciplinary technology of power.
Features continuous surveillance, correctional training, and a focus on individual accountability.
Considered a threat to property and order; equated with criminality.
Punishment was seen as a means to instill virtuous habits by targeting idleness.
Cited by Patrick Colquhoun as a path leading to crime and necessity-driven actions.
Associated with the silent system; key model of a penitentiary during the 19th century.
Faced opposition particularly against total solitary confinement methods.
Another primary penitentiary model known as the Congregate model.
Allowed prisoners to work and socialize during the day but restricted to cells at night.
Spanish term meaning “little hells,” referring to jails in Peru closed during reform efforts.
Defined as the tendency of convicted individuals to reoffend.
Increasing recidivism is often seen as a problem rather than a failure of the rehabilitation discourse.
Probation aims to reduce recidivism with evidence-based strategies.
A system where convicted individuals were sold to private employers for forced labor.
Proportionately affected Black people, preserving elements of slavery under a different guise post-13th Amendment.
Associated with high mortality rates due to harsh conditions and labor.
A myth correlating demographic changes in power, particularly among Black populations, to increased public safety risks.
The punitive nature of law enforcement was framed as a response to perceived threats from racial groups.
Manifested through actions such as escapes, riots, and organized strikes.
Notable events include the San Quentin and Attica uprisings, indicating prison crisis.
Early 20th-century ideology linking hereditary traits to criminality, influencing systems like probation and parole.
Methods of control included sterilization, segregation, and urban surveillance, with anti-Black racism intertwined.
A concept within Eugenics identifying individuals and families deemed biologically or morally inferior.
Linked to notions of hereditary crime and moral decay.
Facilities such as San Quentin, under figures like Dr. Leo Stanley, became sites for medical trials, raising ethical concerns about consent and prisoner rights.
A non-fixed sentencing style where sentence length is decided by a parole board's assessment of rehabilitation.
A revolutionary figure, Black Panther Party member, and critic of the capitalist prison system, advocating for prisoner reform and rights.
Era (1830-1960) when courts avoided interfering with prison administration, treating prisoners as state property.
Movements advocating for prisoners' rights reflect significant shifts in the narrative surrounding criminal justice and incarceration issues.
1996 legislation constraining prisoners’ access to federal courts, hindering reform efforts.
Increase of formal administrative structures in response to the prisoners' rights movement and court interventions.
National Standard (For Prisons)
The quest for national standards in prison operations by corrections professionals is identified as another broader effect of the prisoners' rights movement.
Biblio-therapy
Listed as one of the psychological treatments used in prisons during the age of rehabilitation.