Professor Dennis
MS Word #2 #1- The inside out program is basically a way for incarcerated men and women to have the chance to transform the people inside. The ones that come to the prisons in undergraduate college students, with them being able to come they also learn more about the prison on the inside while furthering their education about justice system. The program for it is about a semester long and within that semester around 15 students come in from the outside and sit down and talk to some on the inside. They talk about issues, and social control. The mission that the inside out program wants to achieve is show them that problems can be approached in different ways while being solved in other ways. It allows he time …show more content…
People that work there have several roles like provide leadership, help create partnerships with colleges, and help broaden the education for incarcerated people. The prison population has went up and less schools. Having an inmate study crime with a person on the outside might be a big chance for both of them to learn. Relating this to chapter 14, I would say that having the undergraduates come to the prison for so long and get on a personal level with people on the inside is a good way to learn more about justice. Also, by them realizing the effect of deterrence could be helpful. For the students to give the prisoners a look on the outside and what they have learned about it is a good way to understand what could happen if life kept going down that path. Having the threat of punishment for some might make them not want to commit a crime, but for others having that threat is a way for them saying they can do it and not get caught. Expressional crimes like violent …show more content…
The CCA has sent letters out to all states trying to gain them over and buy the state prisons to run them for a profit. Within the walls of a for-profit prison has been known to be very violent and people’s rights get violated.
#3- The severity of punishment for juvenile delinquents could have an impact on them. If the punishment was harsher then there would be less rearrests. Also, for juveniles there is a period of being taken away from their environment and put in another with complete supervision on an involuntary basis that would be known to cause the arrest rates to drop, rather than the juveniles that went to a voluntary home. Even having a mild punishment like probation will not change the arrest rate. Juveniles feel when they commit a crime that they will get off and just receive probation or put under minor supervision. For adults it is a little different. After understanding the harsher punishments and figuring out that they can get them, it does not always make them not commit a crime. In fact, it can make them think they will not get it and commit the crime anyway. An example for severity of punishment would be a non-handicap person going to Walmart and using a handicap parking spot. If they get caught they will get a $200.00 fine, many people still