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Author:
Hillyer, Reiko, 1969- author.
Title:
A wall is just a wall : the permeability of the prison in the twentieth-century United States / Reiko Hillyer.
Publisher:
Duke University Press,
Copyright Date:
2024
Description:
xiv, 354 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Subject:
Louisiana State Penitentiary.
Prison administration--United States.
Prisoners--United States--Social conditions.
Prisoners--Civil rights--United States.
Prisoners--Family relationships--United States.
Conjugal visits--United States.
Clemency--United States.
Prisons--Administration--États-Unis.
Prisonniers--États-Unis--Conditions sociales.
Prisonniers--Droits--États-Unis.
Prisonniers--Relations familiales--États-Unis.
Visites conjugales--États-Unis.
Clémence--États-Unis.
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Penology.
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 229-334) and index.
Contents:
Clemency in the age of Jim Crow -- Freedom struggles : clemency hangs in the balance in the wake of the Civil Rights Movement -- The house of the dying : the decline of clemency under the new Jim Crow -- Southern hospitality : the rise of conjugal visits -- The national reach of conjugal visits -- "Daddy is in prison" : the decline of conjugal visits and the strange career of family values -- "To rub elbows with freedom" : temporary release in the Jim Crow South -- Conquering prison walls : furloughs at the crossroads of the rehabilitative idea -- Willie Horton and moral panic.
Summary:
"A Wall is Just a Wall examines the connections between incarcerated people and those outside of prisons in the United States since the conclusion of World War II. Reiko Hillyer shows how these connections decreased in the latter half of the twentieth century and incarcerated people became increasingly cut off from the free world. Beginning with an examination of the notorious Louisiana State Penitentiary known as Angola and its Travelling Ambassadors program, which allowed inmates to travel throughout the state for speaking engagements, Hillyer notes that, until the late 1970s, even lifetime sentences to prison were understood as temporary. Louisiana State prisoners with life sentences were routinely let out after 10 years and 6 months, while the federal system defined a life sentence as 15 years. Thus, interaction between inmates and free populations encouraged inmates' eventual reintegration into outside society. By the 1990s, state and national legislation restricted outside visits and lengthened sentences, further separating incarcerated populations from free populations and limiting the ability of prisoners to fashion constructive social identities. Each of the book's three sections focuses on a single policy that allows for connections between inmates and free citizens: gubernatorial clemency and pardons, conjugal and family visits, and temporary furloughs. A Wall is Just a Wall demonstrates that the current impermeability of the prison is neither natural nor inevitable, but rather a recent, uneven, and contested phenomenon"-- Provided by publisher.
ISBN:
1478025875
9781478025870
1478030135
9781478030133
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1393206461
LCCN:
2023036597
Locations:
CDPF771 -- Clive Public Library (Clive)

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