Publication | Closed Access
Continuity in the Face of Penal Innovation: Revisiting the History of American Solitary Confinement
42
Citations
46
References
2017
Year
Forensic PsychologyUs PrisonsCriminal CodeCriminal Justice ReformPenal TechnologiesLawCriminal LawPenal InnovationSocial SciencesCriminal Justice SystemAmerican Solitary ConfinementCorrectional PracticePrison ViolencePenologyDecarcerationPunishmentCriminal JusticeSociologyCarceral SettingJusticeSolitary Confinement
Solitary confinement has been a perennial tool of control in US prisons, despite its status as a repeatedly delegitimized practice. Although there have been significant changes in punishment over time, solitary confinement has remained, mostly at the margins and always as a response to past failures, part of an unending search for greater control over prisoners. This history raises the question of how a discredited penal technology can nevertheless persist. We locate the source of this persistence in prison administrators' unflagging belief in solitary confinement as a last-resort tool of control. To maintain this highly criticized practice, prison administrators strategically revise, but never abandon, discredited practices in response to antecedent legitimacy struggles. Using solitary confinement as a case study, we demonstrate how penal technologies that violate current sensibilities can survive, despite changing macro-level social factors that otherwise explain penal change and practice, provided those technologies serve prison officials' internal goals.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1