Under the auspices of a governmentally sanctioned war on drugs, incarceration rates in the United States have risen dramatically since 1980. Increasingly, correctional administrators at all levels are turning to private, for...

Buy Now From Amazon

Under the auspices of a governmentally sanctioned war on drugs, incarceration rates in the United States have risen dramatically since 1980. Increasingly, correctional administrators at all levels are turning to private, for-profit corporations to manage the swelling inmate population. Policy discussions of this trend toward prison privatization tend to focus on cost-effectiveness, contract monitoring, and enforcement, but in his Private Prisons in America, Michael A. Hallett reveals that these issues are only part of the story. Demonstrating that imprisonment serves numerous agendas other than crime control, Hallett's analysis suggests that private prisons are best understood not as the product of increasing crime rates, but instead as the latest chapter in a troubling history of discrimination aimed primarily at African American men.

Similar Products

Punishment for Sale: Private Prisons, Big Business, and the Incarceration Binge (Issues in Crime and Justice)Prison Profiteers: Who Makes Money from Mass IncarcerationAre Prisons Obsolete?The New Jim Crow:  Mass Incarceration in the Age of ColorblindnessThe New American Militarism: How Americans Are Seduced by WarCAPITALIST PUNISHMENTFresh Fruit, Broken Bodies: Migrant Farmworkers in the United States (California Series in Public Anthropology)Living Faith: Everyday Religion and Mothers in Poverty (Morality and Society Series)