Foreword: The phenomenon of USP Marion / Greg Newbold -- Introduction / Stephen C. Richards -- The politicization of the hole in Indiana and Missouri / Jon Marc Taylor -- The realities of special housing units in the federal bureau of prisons / Seth Ferranti -- Going to the hole in California: cauldron of solitude / Eugene Dey -- The boy scout in solitary at USP Lompoc / Brian Edward Malnes -- Long-term solitary segregation in the United States and Canada / Gregory J. McMaster -- Theorizing "marionization" and the supermax prison movement / Kevin I. Minor and Marisa M. Baumgardner -- Female prisoners and solitary confinement / Dennis J. Stevens -- The scene of the crime: children in solitary confinement / Christopher Bickel -- Colorado supermax study: what the critics say and the future holds / Russ Immarigeon -- Revisiting the mental health effects of solitary confinement on prisoners in supermax units: a psychological jurisprudence perspective / Bruce A. Arrigo and Heather Y. Bersot -- Doing hard time in the United Kingdom / David Honeywell -- Solitary confinement and convict segregation in French prisons / Martine Herzog-Evans -- Israeli maximum-security prisons / Lior Gideon, Dror Walk, and Tomer Carmel -- Conclusion: Rethinking prisons in the 21st century / Stephen C. Richards.
Summary:
"The Marion Experiment combines academic research with personal accounts by prisoners to investigate solitary confinement and supermax prisons. USP Marion became a model for supermax prisons, with many other prison systems--in the U.S. and abroad--copying the special architectural and program innovations there"-- Provided by publisher.
Series:
Elmer H. Johnson and Carol Holmes Johnson series in criminology
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.