Want this question answered?
The cost of maintining prisons, staff and constructing new prisons lead to the popularity of parole.
Overcrowding in prisons definitely is considered to be cruel and unusual punishment. This is not safe and definitely not humane.
Prisons were still prisons, the penal system was still intact, concentration camps were just an addition.
the original use was as a method to control and bring control to the population. They were like political prisons (as opposed to the state prisons).
Dorothea Dix
Velvet Prisons Russell Jacoby on American Academia - 2013 was released on: USA: 2013
Frank Anton has written: 'Why didn't you get me out?' -- subject(s): American Personal narratives, North Vietnamese Prisoners and prisons, Personal narratives, American, Prisoners and prisons, North Vietnamese, Prisoners and prisons, Viet Cong, Viet Cong Prisoners and prisons, Vietnamese Conflict, 1961-1975
they partied
Drug offenders are the main reason for increased jail population.
Scrooge supports the establishment of his own business, a counting-house where he conducts financial transactions and manages his wealth. He is known for being a shrewd and diligent businessman who prioritizes profits and efficiency above all else.
Taketoshi Yamamoto has written: 'Nihonhei horyo wa nani o shabetta ka' -- subject(s): American Prisoners and prisons, Military intelligence, Prisoners and prisons, American, Prisoners of war, World War, 1939-1945
There are 33 state prisons in California.
Bailey Gillespie has written: 'Korean War remembered' -- subject(s): American Personal narratives, Korean War, 1950-1953, North Korean Prisoners and prisons, Personal narratives, American, Prisoners and prisons, North Korean, Prisoners of war, Veterans
Volker Wehdeking has written: 'Generationenwechsel' -- subject(s): German fiction, History and criticism, Intermediality 'Der Nullpunkt' -- subject(s): American Prisoners and prisons, German literature, History and criticism, Prisoners and prisons, American, World War, 1939-1945
American prisons have become fertile grounds for the recruitment of radical Islamists. Most inmates have little access to outside libraries and are particularly susceptible to a radical form of Islam practiced in US prisons known as Wahhabism. Wahhabism is the state run fundamentalist sect of Saudi Arabia and teaches an extremist form of Islam that calls for hatred of all non-Wahhabi Muslims.
Dorothy Still Danner has written: 'What a way to spend a war' -- subject(s): American Personal narratives, Biography, Japanese Prisoners and prisons, Nurses, Personal narratives, American, Prisoners and prisons, Japanese, Prisoners of war, World War, 1939-1945
Robert K. Harmuth has written: 'Battlin' Bastards and Pigboats' -- subject(s): World War, 1939-1945, Prisoners of war, Submarine, Prisoners and prisons, Japanese, Naval operations, Naval operations, American, American Naval operations, Japanese Prisoners and prisons