Prison abolition movement
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (July 2006) |
This article has been nominated to be checked for its neutrality. Discussion of this nomination can be found on the talk page. (January 2008) |
The aim of the prison abolition movement is to eliminate prisons, jails, immigration detention centers, and prisoner of war camps by alternatives which they argue are more useful and more humane. Prison abolitionists present a broad critique of the criminal justice system in the West, which they feel is racist, classist, and ineffectual at reforming criminals, decreasing crime, or reconciling the victims of crime. Many people involved in the prison abolition movement are also involved in struggles against other perceived forms of social control and oppression, such as the institutionalization of the insane.[citation needed]
Contents |
[edit] Advocates for prison abolition
Historically, Quakers were among the first advocates for alternatives to prison.
Anarchist groups such as Anarchist Black Cross have played a significant part in the prison abolition movement and this trend continues today. Anarchists wish to eliminate all forms of state control, of which imprisonment is seen as one of the more obvious examples. Anarchists also oppose prisons because they house non-violent offenders (e.g., thieves and swindlers instead of just murderers and rapists), incarcerate mainly poor people or people of color, and do not generally rehabilitate criminals, in many cases making them worse[citation needed]. As a result, the prison abolition movement often is associated with anarchism and anti-authoritarianism.
[edit] Prison reforms and alternatives
Proposals for prison reform and proposed alternatives to prisons differ significantly depending on the political beliefs behind them. Proposals and tactics often include:
- Penal system reforms:
- Substituting incarceration with supervised release, probation, restitution to victims, or community work.
- Decreasing terms of imprisonment by abolishing mandatory minimum sentencing
- Decreasing ethnic disparity in prison populations
- Prison condition reforms
- Crime prevention rather than punishment
- Abolition of specific programs which increase prison population, such as the prohibition of drugs (e.g. War on Drugs), gun control, prohibition of prostitution, and alcohol restrictions.
- Education programs to inform people who have never been in prison about the problems
- Fighting individual cases of wrongful conviction
[edit] Anarchist view
The neutrality of this section is disputed. Please see the discussion on the talk page.(March 2008) Please do not remove this message until the dispute is resolved. |
In place of prisons, anarchism proposes community-controlled courts, councils, or assemblies to control the problem of social crime. They argue that with the destruction of capitalism, and the self-management of production by workers and communities, property crimes would largely vanish. A large part of the problem, according to anarchists, is the way the judicial systems deals with prisoners, people and capital. They argue that there would be fewer prisoners if society treated people more fairly, regardless of gender, color, ethnic background, sexual preference, education, etc.
[edit] Arguments made for prison abolition
The neutrality or factuality of this article or section may be compromised by unattributed statements. You can help Wikipedia by removing weasel worded statements. |
This article or section may contain original research or unverified claims. Please improve the article by adding references. See the talk page for details. (September 2007) |
- Prisons are less effective at discouraging crimes and/or compensating victims than other forms of punishment.[1]
- Degree and quality of access to justice depends on the financial resources of the accused. [2] [3]
- Laws are biased towards profiting one segment of the population over another[citation needed]. For example, in most countries tobacco is legal, while marijuana is not, because large corporations control the former, while the latter is not currently taxed.
- Prisons alienate people from their communities.
- In the U.S., people of color and from the lower class are much more likely to be imprisoned than people of European descent or people who are wealthy.[4]
- People who are put in prison for what are arguably crimes motivated by need, such as some minor theft (food, etc) or prostitution, find it much harder to obtain legal employment once convicted of a crime. Arguably, this difficulty makes it more likely they will find themselves back in the prison system, having had few other options or resources available to support themselves and/or their families.[citation needed] Many prison abolitionists argue that we should "legalize survival" and provide help to those who need it instead of making it even harder to find work and perpetuating the non-violent crimes.
- Prisons are not proven to make people less violent. In fact, there is evidence that they may instead promote violence in individuals by surrounding them with other violent criminals, which can lead to predictable negative/violent results.[5]
Opponents of the abolition argue that none of the above arguments addresses the protection of non-criminal population from the effects of crime, and from particuarly violent criminals.
[edit] See also
[edit] List of organizations supporting prison abolition
- The Canadian Association of Elizabeth Fry Societies
- Anarchist Black Cross
- Anarchist Prisoners' Legal Aid Network
- Critical Resistance
- Justice Now
- Socialist Party USA
- Socialist Resistance
- Massachusetts Statewide Harm Reduction Coaltion (SHaRC)
- Prison Activist Resource Center (PARC)
- JusticeAction Australia
[edit] List of other relevant organizations
- American Civil Liberties Union
- American Friends Service Committee
- Books to Prisoners
- Families Against Mandatory Minimums
- NAACP
- November Coalition
[edit] Relevant topics
- Angela Davis
- incarceration
- judicial system
- prison reform
- prison
- prison education
- prison labor
- prisoner of war
- private prison
- probation
[edit] References
- ^ Andrews and Bonta, 2003
- ^ TheStar.com | Canada | Access to justice a `basic right'
- ^ Public Interest Law Institute - Indigent Defense Systems in the United States
- ^ Prison population statistics. Retrieved on 2007-10-04.
- ^ MotherJones.com - Debt to Society
[edit] External links
- European abolitionists on "future of abolitionism"
- Prison abolition & alternatives
- ZNet article on Prison Abolition
- Prison Abolition pamphlet
- Radical Alternatives to Prison
- Howard League for Penal Reform
- Article calling for abolition of prisons by conservative author Gary North
- IWW General Defense Committee