NCJ Number
173995
Date Published
1997
Length
276 pages
Annotation
Using narrative and just over 330 illustrations and photographs, this book presents the history of corrections in America, from colonial times, through the rise of penitentiaries and reformatories, to the emphasis on rehabilitation of the offender.
Abstract
The first chapter discusses European influences on American prisons, including the earliest prisons; bridewells, banishment, and hulks; and the wave of reform against inhumane punishment in the latter half of the 18th century. A chapter on colonial and revolutionary America considers sanctions in the colonies, the criminal code promulgated by William Penn when he was governor of Pennsylvania, Benjamin Rush and the Philadelphia Prison Society, and America's first prisons. The rise of the penitentiary is reviewed in another chapter. The topics addressed are the Pennsylvania system (separate system), the Auburn system (congregate system), and the Civil War and its aftermath. The next chapter focuses on the reformatory era, as it discusses the origin of the reformatory concept, the reform work of the National Prison Association, the programs of reformatories, the Three Prisons Act and the origins of Federal corrections, and prisons in Canada. A chapter covers new directions for corrections at the beginning of the 20th century, with attention to the State-use system of inmate labor, new prison technologies and living conditions, and prisons for women. A chapter on the goal of individualized treatment discusses scientific penology, the Federal Bureau of Prisons, juvenile offenders, and prisons in wartime. Remaining chapters focus on postwar tensions and the medical model of corrections, the emergence of a model that sought to balance rehabilitation and custodial goals, and the current return to a more punitive approach to corrections. 41 suggestions for further reading and a subject index