- History and Goals
- Prison Organization
- Correctional Officers
- Prison Society
- Women in Prison
- Prison Programs
- Violence
- Prisoner Rights
http://www.inmatecountyjail.com
The document discusses good practices for supporting university students who disclose experiences of sexual violence. It provides recommendations for listening without judgment, helping the student process their thoughts and options, and connecting them to support resources. However, it notes that few students actually report such experiences to universities or support organizations. At the Public University of Navarre in Spain, the Equality Unit and new protocol on harassment aim to establish practices for prevention, but challenges remain in fully implementing and publicizing the protocol. Trained professionals, confidential spaces, coordination, and awareness efforts could help students disclose and receive support.
The document discusses several aspects of prison culture and life for inmates. It outlines the inmate code which emphasizes not interfering with other inmates or exploiting them. It also describes the pains of imprisonment including loss of liberty, autonomy, and relationships. It discusses the formation of subcultures among inmates including "convict", "thief", and "straight" groups. For women inmates, it notes they form more stable pseudofamilies and intimate relationships with staff than male inmates. The document also addresses classification of inmates, education and vocational programs in prison, prison industries, rehabilitative programs, and medical services for inmates.
This document provides an overview of life behind bars for inmates. It discusses total institutions, modes of inmate adaptation, the inmate subculture, prisonization, pains of imprisonment, theories on the formation of inmate subcultures, the prison code, argot, inmate roles for men and women, sexuality and violence in men's prisons, characteristics of women inmates compared to men, and features unique to women's prisons such as pseudofamilies and mothers in prison. It concludes with a brief discussion of cocorrectional facilities that house both male and female offenders.
The goal of prisoner reentry programs is to reduce recidivism by helping inmates transition successfully back into the community through programs, services, and support that address barriers to reentry.
This document discusses Erving Goffman's concept of the "total institution" and how prisons fit this model. It examines how prisons use processes like "mortification" and "stripping of self" to break down an inmate's identity and force conformity to the prison system. It also looks at theories around the development of prison subcultures and how inmates cope with the deprivations of prison life.
This PowerPoint was used for a Professional Development Institute presentation given at the National Career Development Association's Annual Global Career Development Conference in San Antonio, Texas in June 2011.
Behind Every Person Who Does Not Return to Prisoner – Stands a Strong Family,...Dr. Glenda Clare (LION)
Behind Every Person Who Does Not Return to Prisoner – Stands a Strong Family, Strong Community
Dr. Glenda Clare presented this workshop at a ReEntry Conference. Participants learned the importance family intervention services, how to assess need, &
how to develop an effective family intervention plan.
Overcrowding in prisons has increased significantly over the past 25 years. As of 2010, state and federal prisons in the US were operating between full capacity and 40% above capacity. This overcrowding leads to issues like idleness, violence, and medical/mental health problems among inmates. Chapter 13 discusses potential solutions to overcrowding like reducing incarceration and increasing alternatives to prison. It also covers other prison issues such as privatization, the use of supermax facilities, and how technology impacts corrections.
The document discusses good practices for supporting university students who disclose experiences of sexual violence. It provides recommendations for listening without judgment, helping the student process their thoughts and options, and connecting them to support resources. However, it notes that few students actually report such experiences to universities or support organizations. At the Public University of Navarre in Spain, the Equality Unit and new protocol on harassment aim to establish practices for prevention, but challenges remain in fully implementing and publicizing the protocol. Trained professionals, confidential spaces, coordination, and awareness efforts could help students disclose and receive support.
The document discusses several aspects of prison culture and life for inmates. It outlines the inmate code which emphasizes not interfering with other inmates or exploiting them. It also describes the pains of imprisonment including loss of liberty, autonomy, and relationships. It discusses the formation of subcultures among inmates including "convict", "thief", and "straight" groups. For women inmates, it notes they form more stable pseudofamilies and intimate relationships with staff than male inmates. The document also addresses classification of inmates, education and vocational programs in prison, prison industries, rehabilitative programs, and medical services for inmates.
This document provides an overview of life behind bars for inmates. It discusses total institutions, modes of inmate adaptation, the inmate subculture, prisonization, pains of imprisonment, theories on the formation of inmate subcultures, the prison code, argot, inmate roles for men and women, sexuality and violence in men's prisons, characteristics of women inmates compared to men, and features unique to women's prisons such as pseudofamilies and mothers in prison. It concludes with a brief discussion of cocorrectional facilities that house both male and female offenders.
The goal of prisoner reentry programs is to reduce recidivism by helping inmates transition successfully back into the community through programs, services, and support that address barriers to reentry.
This document discusses Erving Goffman's concept of the "total institution" and how prisons fit this model. It examines how prisons use processes like "mortification" and "stripping of self" to break down an inmate's identity and force conformity to the prison system. It also looks at theories around the development of prison subcultures and how inmates cope with the deprivations of prison life.
This PowerPoint was used for a Professional Development Institute presentation given at the National Career Development Association's Annual Global Career Development Conference in San Antonio, Texas in June 2011.
Behind Every Person Who Does Not Return to Prisoner – Stands a Strong Family,...Dr. Glenda Clare (LION)
Behind Every Person Who Does Not Return to Prisoner – Stands a Strong Family, Strong Community
Dr. Glenda Clare presented this workshop at a ReEntry Conference. Participants learned the importance family intervention services, how to assess need, &
how to develop an effective family intervention plan.
Overcrowding in prisons has increased significantly over the past 25 years. As of 2010, state and federal prisons in the US were operating between full capacity and 40% above capacity. This overcrowding leads to issues like idleness, violence, and medical/mental health problems among inmates. Chapter 13 discusses potential solutions to overcrowding like reducing incarceration and increasing alternatives to prison. It also covers other prison issues such as privatization, the use of supermax facilities, and how technology impacts corrections.
This document discusses various forms of misconduct by correctional professionals, such as bribery, abuse of inmates, and negligence. It provides examples like the "Cowboys" gang of guards in Colorado who beat inmates. The document also discusses acts like the Prison Rape Elimination Act to address the problem of prison rape. It explores alternatives to the traditional punitive model, like restorative justice that focuses on rehabilitation and community involvement rather than solely punishment.
The Challenges of Preventing & Responding to Violence Against Women Crimes on...Margolis Healy
This document discusses the challenges of preventing and responding to violence against women on college campuses. It identifies several key challenges, including denial of the problem, difficulties coordinating responses across different campus departments and with local law enforcement, lack of adequate support services, and lack of knowledge about the nature and dynamics of violence against women crimes. The document provides examples of successes in addressing these challenges through collaboration, clear policies, training, and ensuring support and advocacy services are well-coordinated both on and off campus.
This document discusses various forms of misconduct among correctional professionals, including corruption for personal gain, abuse and mistreatment of inmates, and systemic issues that harm inmates. It provides examples like a former Colorado prison guard who admitted to beating inmates, and discusses legislation like the Prison Rape Elimination Act of 2003 which aims to prevent sexual abuse in prisons. The document also discusses alternatives to the traditional punitive model, like restorative justice approaches that emphasize rehabilitation and addressing the needs of victims.
This document discusses ethics in biomedical informatics. It begins with an introduction to ethics and bioethics, defining key terms like ethics, morals, and norms. It then discusses ethical issues that can arise in health informatics, including issues with clinical decision support systems. The document reviews several important historical cases in bioethics that helped develop core ethical principles, such as informed consent and minimizing harm. These include the Nuremberg Code, Beecher's research ethics violations, and the Tuskegee Syphilis Study. It concludes with discussing the three principles from the Belmont Report - respect for persons, beneficence, and justice.
This document provides an introduction to research ethics and ethics for health informaticians. It begins with definitions of ethics, morals, and norms. It then discusses the role of law, professional codes of conduct, and ethics in establishing standards of acceptable behavior. Key topics in research ethics are introduced through discussions of historic cases like the Nazi human experiments, Beecher's research ethics violations, and the Tuskegee Syphilis Study. The document outlines the Belmont Report's three ethical principles of respect for persons, beneficence, and justice. Ethical issues in health informatics like alerts fatigue from clinical decision support systems and unintended consequences of health IT are also discussed.
Presented at the Health Informatics and Health Information Technology Course, Doctor of Philosophy and Master of Science Programs in Data Science for Health Care (International Program), Faculty of Medicine Ramathibodi Hospital, Mahidol University on October 31, 2017
This document provides an introduction to research ethics and ethics for health informaticians. It discusses key topics like the introduction to ethics and bioethics, ethical issues in health informatics, information ethics and clinical decision making. It also includes case studies of historic cases in research ethics like the Nazi human experimentation, Milgram study, Stanford prison experiment and Tuskegee study. The document discusses principles like respect for persons, beneficence, justice from the Belmont report. It also covers ethical, legal and social issues and clinical decision support systems.
Presented at the M.S. and Ph.D. Programs in Data Science for Health Care, Faculty of Medicine Ramathibodi Hospital, Mahidol University, Bangkok, Thailand on November 14, 2019
Swk100 Safeguarding self and vulnerable othersTim Curtis
The document discusses the evolution of safeguarding policies from a focus on protection to a broader concept of safeguarding for both children and vulnerable adults. It explores the social and political context driving these changes, and the role and responsibilities of volunteers in ensuring proper safeguarding measures like training, supervision, and reporting procedures are followed to protect both those being served and the volunteers themselves. Critics argue the term "safeguarding" has become too broad and professionals unclear on who to target for interventions.
The History & Trends of Sentencing in Relation to Child Sexual Offences
A collaborative project with HAQ Centre for Child Rights
Supervised by:
Bharti Ali (Co-Director at HAQ) & Debra Ronan (Director of PACE at Macquarie University)
Written & Compiled By:
Anita Burkart, Ellie Chapman, Michael Kendall, Amanda Thorpe, Alexander Tieu, Calli Tsipidis, Shelley Xu & Lucy Wu
HAQ: Center for Child Rights
B1/2, Ground Floor,
Malviya Nagar
New Delhi - 110017
Tel: +91-26677412,26673599
Fax: +91-26674688
Website: www.haqcrc.org
FaceBook Page: https://www.facebook.com/HaqCentreForChildRights
This document provides an overview of public health ethics. It begins by outlining the course objectives, which are to understand ethics definitions, principles, and controversies in healthcare, public health, and research. It then defines ethics and morality. The document discusses the historical perspectives of the Nazi experiments, Nuremberg Code, Tuskegee Syphilis Study, Belmont Report, Declaration of Helsinki, and other international guidelines. It also covers the general ethical principles of respect for autonomy, beneficence, nonmaleficence, and justice. The document discusses topics like informed consent, paternalism, confidentiality, and ethics in communicable disease control and epidemiological research.
This document discusses different theories and perspectives on ethics and morality. It begins by examining how ethics relates to value judgements and decision making. It then explores moral relativism and the idea that moral values vary between cultures. Different views on morality are presented, including that it requires conscience and responsibility. The document also discusses deontological ethics based on duty, utilitarianism focusing on the greatest happiness, and the perspectives that morality stems from religion, fear of punishment, or self interest.
This document outlines the key topics and objectives covered in a public health ethics course. It discusses the definition of ethics and morality. It then covers several important historical cases in research ethics, including the Nazi experiments, Tuskegee Syphilis Study, Nuremberg Code, Declaration of Helsinki, and Belmont Report. The four main ethical principles - respect for autonomy, beneficence, nonmaleficence, and justice - are introduced. The document also discusses ethical issues around communicable disease control and informed consent.
Mass incarceration and the cradle to prison pipelineTerri Stewart
A presentation on mass incarceration, the cradle to prison pipeline, and the prison industrial complex. With a special emphasis on Washington state and King County. And on juvenile justice.
This document discusses social work practice in the field of crime and corrections. It addresses issues at the micro, meso, and macro levels that offenders may face. It explores how culture and location influence what behaviors are considered criminal and how crime statistics have limitations. Common offender characteristics are outlined. The goals of criminal justice systems around punishment, rehabilitation and community safety are discussed. The roles of social workers in primary, secondary and tertiary intervention models are presented along with dilemmas in balancing social control and care.
Women in Prison is a gender specific campaign and support organization for women affected by the criminal justice system that was started in 1983. It provides advocacy, mental health support, housing assistance, education, and art programs for women in prisons and community centers. The organization aims to divert women from custody, provide community support alternatives to imprisonment, and improve conditions for women in prison. Some key facts are that over 50% of women in prison experienced domestic or child abuse, many have mental health or substance abuse issues, and over 60% leave prison without a home.
This document discusses the Bangkok Rules, which provide guidelines for the treatment of women prisoners and offenders. It summarizes the key principles and rules of the Bangkok Rules, including that women prisoners should be treated with dignity and respect, have their gender-specific needs met, and be able to maintain family contact. It also discusses alternatives to imprisonment for women offenders, with a focus on non-custodial measures and taking into account women's roles as caregivers.
This document provides an overview of experimental methods for social scientists. It discusses key concepts in causal inference and experimental design such as treatment, randomization, and measurement. Randomization techniques covered include simple random assignment, block randomization, and cluster randomization. Ethical considerations in experimentation are also reviewed. The document aims to help researchers design effective experiments and interpret their results causally.
Imagine Life Behind Bars. . .
The anatomy of a prison cell.
Absence of usual privileges.
Going to prison is like going to an alien world.
No refrigerator, kitchen, private bathroom.
This document discusses various forms of misconduct by correctional professionals, such as bribery, abuse of inmates, and negligence. It provides examples like the "Cowboys" gang of guards in Colorado who beat inmates. The document also discusses acts like the Prison Rape Elimination Act to address the problem of prison rape. It explores alternatives to the traditional punitive model, like restorative justice that focuses on rehabilitation and community involvement rather than solely punishment.
The Challenges of Preventing & Responding to Violence Against Women Crimes on...Margolis Healy
This document discusses the challenges of preventing and responding to violence against women on college campuses. It identifies several key challenges, including denial of the problem, difficulties coordinating responses across different campus departments and with local law enforcement, lack of adequate support services, and lack of knowledge about the nature and dynamics of violence against women crimes. The document provides examples of successes in addressing these challenges through collaboration, clear policies, training, and ensuring support and advocacy services are well-coordinated both on and off campus.
This document discusses various forms of misconduct among correctional professionals, including corruption for personal gain, abuse and mistreatment of inmates, and systemic issues that harm inmates. It provides examples like a former Colorado prison guard who admitted to beating inmates, and discusses legislation like the Prison Rape Elimination Act of 2003 which aims to prevent sexual abuse in prisons. The document also discusses alternatives to the traditional punitive model, like restorative justice approaches that emphasize rehabilitation and addressing the needs of victims.
This document discusses ethics in biomedical informatics. It begins with an introduction to ethics and bioethics, defining key terms like ethics, morals, and norms. It then discusses ethical issues that can arise in health informatics, including issues with clinical decision support systems. The document reviews several important historical cases in bioethics that helped develop core ethical principles, such as informed consent and minimizing harm. These include the Nuremberg Code, Beecher's research ethics violations, and the Tuskegee Syphilis Study. It concludes with discussing the three principles from the Belmont Report - respect for persons, beneficence, and justice.
This document provides an introduction to research ethics and ethics for health informaticians. It begins with definitions of ethics, morals, and norms. It then discusses the role of law, professional codes of conduct, and ethics in establishing standards of acceptable behavior. Key topics in research ethics are introduced through discussions of historic cases like the Nazi human experiments, Beecher's research ethics violations, and the Tuskegee Syphilis Study. The document outlines the Belmont Report's three ethical principles of respect for persons, beneficence, and justice. Ethical issues in health informatics like alerts fatigue from clinical decision support systems and unintended consequences of health IT are also discussed.
Presented at the Health Informatics and Health Information Technology Course, Doctor of Philosophy and Master of Science Programs in Data Science for Health Care (International Program), Faculty of Medicine Ramathibodi Hospital, Mahidol University on October 31, 2017
This document provides an introduction to research ethics and ethics for health informaticians. It discusses key topics like the introduction to ethics and bioethics, ethical issues in health informatics, information ethics and clinical decision making. It also includes case studies of historic cases in research ethics like the Nazi human experimentation, Milgram study, Stanford prison experiment and Tuskegee study. The document discusses principles like respect for persons, beneficence, justice from the Belmont report. It also covers ethical, legal and social issues and clinical decision support systems.
Presented at the M.S. and Ph.D. Programs in Data Science for Health Care, Faculty of Medicine Ramathibodi Hospital, Mahidol University, Bangkok, Thailand on November 14, 2019
Swk100 Safeguarding self and vulnerable othersTim Curtis
The document discusses the evolution of safeguarding policies from a focus on protection to a broader concept of safeguarding for both children and vulnerable adults. It explores the social and political context driving these changes, and the role and responsibilities of volunteers in ensuring proper safeguarding measures like training, supervision, and reporting procedures are followed to protect both those being served and the volunteers themselves. Critics argue the term "safeguarding" has become too broad and professionals unclear on who to target for interventions.
The History & Trends of Sentencing in Relation to Child Sexual Offences
A collaborative project with HAQ Centre for Child Rights
Supervised by:
Bharti Ali (Co-Director at HAQ) & Debra Ronan (Director of PACE at Macquarie University)
Written & Compiled By:
Anita Burkart, Ellie Chapman, Michael Kendall, Amanda Thorpe, Alexander Tieu, Calli Tsipidis, Shelley Xu & Lucy Wu
HAQ: Center for Child Rights
B1/2, Ground Floor,
Malviya Nagar
New Delhi - 110017
Tel: +91-26677412,26673599
Fax: +91-26674688
Website: www.haqcrc.org
FaceBook Page: https://www.facebook.com/HaqCentreForChildRights
This document provides an overview of public health ethics. It begins by outlining the course objectives, which are to understand ethics definitions, principles, and controversies in healthcare, public health, and research. It then defines ethics and morality. The document discusses the historical perspectives of the Nazi experiments, Nuremberg Code, Tuskegee Syphilis Study, Belmont Report, Declaration of Helsinki, and other international guidelines. It also covers the general ethical principles of respect for autonomy, beneficence, nonmaleficence, and justice. The document discusses topics like informed consent, paternalism, confidentiality, and ethics in communicable disease control and epidemiological research.
This document discusses different theories and perspectives on ethics and morality. It begins by examining how ethics relates to value judgements and decision making. It then explores moral relativism and the idea that moral values vary between cultures. Different views on morality are presented, including that it requires conscience and responsibility. The document also discusses deontological ethics based on duty, utilitarianism focusing on the greatest happiness, and the perspectives that morality stems from religion, fear of punishment, or self interest.
This document outlines the key topics and objectives covered in a public health ethics course. It discusses the definition of ethics and morality. It then covers several important historical cases in research ethics, including the Nazi experiments, Tuskegee Syphilis Study, Nuremberg Code, Declaration of Helsinki, and Belmont Report. The four main ethical principles - respect for autonomy, beneficence, nonmaleficence, and justice - are introduced. The document also discusses ethical issues around communicable disease control and informed consent.
Mass incarceration and the cradle to prison pipelineTerri Stewart
A presentation on mass incarceration, the cradle to prison pipeline, and the prison industrial complex. With a special emphasis on Washington state and King County. And on juvenile justice.
This document discusses social work practice in the field of crime and corrections. It addresses issues at the micro, meso, and macro levels that offenders may face. It explores how culture and location influence what behaviors are considered criminal and how crime statistics have limitations. Common offender characteristics are outlined. The goals of criminal justice systems around punishment, rehabilitation and community safety are discussed. The roles of social workers in primary, secondary and tertiary intervention models are presented along with dilemmas in balancing social control and care.
Women in Prison is a gender specific campaign and support organization for women affected by the criminal justice system that was started in 1983. It provides advocacy, mental health support, housing assistance, education, and art programs for women in prisons and community centers. The organization aims to divert women from custody, provide community support alternatives to imprisonment, and improve conditions for women in prison. Some key facts are that over 50% of women in prison experienced domestic or child abuse, many have mental health or substance abuse issues, and over 60% leave prison without a home.
This document discusses the Bangkok Rules, which provide guidelines for the treatment of women prisoners and offenders. It summarizes the key principles and rules of the Bangkok Rules, including that women prisoners should be treated with dignity and respect, have their gender-specific needs met, and be able to maintain family contact. It also discusses alternatives to imprisonment for women offenders, with a focus on non-custodial measures and taking into account women's roles as caregivers.
This document provides an overview of experimental methods for social scientists. It discusses key concepts in causal inference and experimental design such as treatment, randomization, and measurement. Randomization techniques covered include simple random assignment, block randomization, and cluster randomization. Ethical considerations in experimentation are also reviewed. The document aims to help researchers design effective experiments and interpret their results causally.
Imagine Life Behind Bars. . .
The anatomy of a prison cell.
Absence of usual privileges.
Going to prison is like going to an alien world.
No refrigerator, kitchen, private bathroom.
The document discusses how hate groups form and spread hateful ideologies in prison systems. It outlines that prisons are no longer isolated from communities, as 95% of prisoners will return to society. Within prisons, gangs originally formed around identities like race and nationality have transformed into hate groups that seek to intimidate and attack others. These groups spread hateful beliefs as an "infectious disease" among inmates. The growth of hate groups in prisons threatens both the prison system and communities, as these groups develop criminal networks and political influence upon returning to society.
Report Objectives
1. To estimate the future size and cost of state and federal prison systems
2. To examine the reasons for projected growth
3. To highlight state efforts to control corrections spending
4. To outline the challenges ahead for state policy makers
http://www.inmatecountyjail.com
Current imprisonment rates, future forecasts and security issuesPaul Colbert
This document discusses the implications of current and projected imprisonment rates, as well as security issues, for Australian prison systems. It notes that imprisonment rates in Australia have been steadily increasing and are projected to continue rising. This expansion is unsustainable and alternatives should be explored. The document also examines how the "war on terror" and high-profile terrorism trials have politicized criminal justice processes and affected prison conditions and regimes. Terrorist inmates are often held in highly restrictive "supermax" prisons, which raises human rights concerns around isolation, mental health, and fair trial rights. Overall, the document argues for reversing imprisonment trends through evidence-based crime prevention and for reviewing restrictive prison conditions for terrorism inmates.
1. BY THE END OF 2011, CDCR PLANS TO REDUCE IT PRISON POPULATION BY 18,000 FELONS
OPENING THE “BACK DOORS”
6,000 TO LA COUNTY
2. BY THE END OF 2011 FEDERAL COURT ORDER TO REDUCE POPULATION BY 60,000
CLOSING THE “FRONT DOORS”
5,000 TO LA COUNTY
3. IN ADDITION TO 21,000 ALREADY PAROLED ON AN ANNUAL BASIS TO LA COUNTY
http://www.inmatecountyjail.com
Corrections in America - State and Local Prison SystemsPaul Colbert
In the USA there are over 1,410,000 adult male prisoners, which are located in more than 1,600 adult state and local prisons in the nation.
http://www.inmatecountyjail.com
California: in 1980, ~ 220 people incarcerated / 100,000.
In 2010, ~731 people incarcerated/100,000
U.S. has highest incarceration rate in the world:
- England and Wales: 154 inmates per 100,000
- Iraq and Iran: 133 inmates per 100,000
- Canada : 116 inmates per 100,000
- Japan: 63 inmates per 100,000
http://www.inmatecountyjail.com
Analysis of a specialized regional jail facility Paul Colbert
Jail for Offenders with Mental Health/Chemical Abuse Challenges. JLARC assess whether existing facilities could be converted to a specialized, regional jail (E2SSB 5763, 2005). Specialized: offenders with mental health and co-occurring mental or chemical dependency disorders that need specialized treatment. Regional jail: offenders from many counties and cities
http://www.inmatecountyjail.com
Alabama Department of Corrections - Perspective and Solutions 2012Paul Colbert
The document summarizes the key points from the Association of County Commissioners 83rd Annual Convention presentation by the Alabama Department of Corrections. It discusses ADOC's budget challenges including rising healthcare costs and overcrowded facilities. It outlines solutions ADOC has implemented like agreements with counties to house inmates, use of K9 units, and expanding community corrections programs. It also references the Supreme Court ruling in Brown v. Plata requiring California to reduce its prison population due to overcrowding, and warnings that Alabama may face a similar federal takeover if sentencing reforms are not passed to alleviate overcrowding issues.
2012 National Association of Sentencing CommissionsPaul Colbert
October 2006, CDCR reached an all time high for inmate population and September 2007 and all time high for parolees.
173,500 inmates
160,000 were in institutions
128,000 parolees
15,000+ were in prisons
Design Capacity was 80,000 beds
Overcrowding rate = 200%
http://www.inmatecountyjail.com
What Counties Need to Know to Implement Criminal Justice RealignmentPaul Colbert
Criminal Justice Realignment:
1. Shifts custody of felons sentenced for non-violent, non-serious, non-sex offenses to county control unless excluded by statute
2. Establishes Postrelease Community Supervision (PRCS)
3. Changes state parole revocation process
4. Tasks Community Corrections Partnerships (CCPs) with planning for the change and implementing local plans
5. Funded by diverted state sales tax, specified vehicle license fee proceeds, and some state General Fund dollars
http://www.inmatecountyjail.com
Sonoma county - Public Safety RealignmentPaul Colbert
Why Realignment?
- Coleman/Plata –prison overcrowding lawsuit
- State budget
- Recidivism rate from CDCR
- Research
Realignment does not result in early release of any currently sentenced felons. Realignment does not transfer custody of any prisoner from State Prison directly to County Jail. Rather, it changes jurisdiction of specified populations from state to local control, by changing sentencing and supervision requirements
By Chief Probation Officers of California
http://www.inmatecountyjail.com
Federal Authorities Urge Vigilance Amid Bird Flu Outbreak | The Lifesciences ...The Lifesciences Magazine
Federal authorities have advised the public to remain vigilant but calm in response to the ongoing bird flu outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza, commonly known as bird flu.
लालू यादव की जीवनी LALU PRASAD YADAV BIOGRAPHYVoterMood
Discover the life and times of Lalu Prasad Yadav with a comprehensive biography in Hindi. Learn about his early days, rise in politics, controversies, and contribution.
15062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
projet de traité négocié à Istanbul (anglais).pdfEdouardHusson
Ceci est le projet de traité qui avait été négocié entre Russes et Ukrainiens à Istanbul en mars 2022, avant que les Etats-Unis et la Grande-Bretagne ne détournent Kiev de signer.
13062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
#WenguiGuo#WashingtonFarm Guo Wengui Wolf son ambition exposed to open a far...rittaajmal71
Since fleeing to the United States in 2014, Guo Wengui has founded a number of projects in the United States, such as GTV Media Group, GTV private equity, farm loan project, G Club Operations Co., LTD., and Himalaya Exchange.
Slide deck with charts from our Digital News Report 2024, the most comprehensive exploration of news consumption habits around the world, based on survey data from more than 95,000 respondents across 47 countries.
Youngest c m in India- Pema Khandu BiographyVoterMood
Pema Khandu, born on August 21, 1979, is an Indian politician and the Chief Minister of Arunachal Pradesh. He is the son of former Chief Minister of Arunachal Pradesh, Dorjee Khandu. Pema Khandu assumed office as the Chief Minister in July 2016, making him one of the youngest Chief Ministers in India at that time.
केरल उच्च न्यायालय ने 11 जून, 2024 को मंडला पूजा में भाग लेने की अनुमति मांगने वाली 10 वर्षीय लड़की की रिट याचिका को खारिज कर दिया, जिसमें सर्वोच्च न्यायालय की एक बड़ी पीठ के समक्ष इस मुद्दे की लंबित प्रकृति पर जोर दिया गया। यह आदेश न्यायमूर्ति अनिल के. नरेंद्रन और न्यायमूर्ति हरिशंकर वी. मेनन की खंडपीठ द्वारा पारित किया गया
12062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
Recent years have seen a disturbing rise in violence, discrimination, and intolerance against Christian communities in various Islamic countries. This multifaceted challenge, deeply rooted in historical, social, and political animosities, demands urgent attention. Despite the escalating persecution, substantial support from the Western world remains lacking.
16062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
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ग्रेटर मुंबई के नगर आयुक्त को एक खुले पत्र में याचिका दायर कर 540 से अधिक मुंबईकरों ने सभी अवैध और अस्थिर होर्डिंग्स, साइनबोर्ड और इलेक्ट्रिक साइनेज को तत्काल हटाने और 13 मई, 2024 की शाम को घाटकोपर में अवैध होर्डिंग के गिरने की विनाशकारी घटना के बाद अपराधियों के खिलाफ सख्त कार्रवाई की मांग की है, जिसमें 17 लोगों की जान चली गई और कई निर्दोष लोग गंभीर रूप से घायल हो गए।
1. Incarceration and Prison Society
• History and Goals
• Prison Organization
• Correctional
Officers
• Prison Society
• Women in Prison
• Prison Programs
• Violence
• Prisoner Rights
2. Prison History
• Big Houses
– South different
• Traditional Prison
Population
• Changing Prison
Population
3. GOALS OF I NCARCERATI ON
Custodial Rehabilitation Reintegration
18. • Established early on
• Internal maintenance
• Industry shops and
contract work
• Inefficient
• Opposed by labor
unions
Prison Industries
19. Violence in prison
• Explanat ions
• Types
• Cont ribut ing
f act ors t hat can be
cont rolled
20. Until the 1960s – Supreme Court
“Hands Off” policy on prisons
Cooper v. Pate (1964) - prisoners may
challenge the conditions of their confinement
under civil rights legislation.
21. First Amendment Rights
Theriault v. Carson (1977) – no sham religious
practices allowed
Procunier v. Martinez (1974) – censorship of
mail only to extent necessary to maintain
security
22. Fourth Amendment Rights
Hudson v. Palmer (1984) – officials can search
cell and confiscate materials
Bell v. Wolfish (1979) – body searches allowed
if clear and legitimate purpose outweighs
invasion of personal privacy
23. Eighth Amendment Rights
Three principle tests – 1) shocks
conscience 2) unnecessarily cruel 3)goes
beyond legitimate penal aims
Estelle v. Gamble (1976) – no deliberate
indifference to medical needs
24. 14th
Amendment Rights
Wolff v. McDonnell (1974) – basic due process
rights in disciplinary hearings
Lee v. Washington (1968) – no racial
segregation in prisons; only justified
temporarily to restore order or prevent
violence
25. Hello, is this microphone on?
• _____ is the model of correctional institutions that emphasizes maintenance of
the offender’s ties to family and community.
• Reintegration Model
• _____ are often used by prison officials as a communication source between
officials and the inmate population.
• Inmate leaders
• _____ is the model of corrections that emphasizes security, discipline, and
order.
• Custodial Model
• In ____ the Supreme Court said prisoners have basic due process rights in
disciplinary hearings
• Wolff v. McDonnell (1974)
• _____ is the orientation that judges had toward prisoners’ rights prior to the
1960s.
• Hands off policy
• _____ is the system of barter and purchase based on cigarettes and other items
that prisoners use to gain desired items
• Prison economy