Gresham Sykes's Five Major Deplusions Of Prisons

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Most prisoners that are in prison now are more than likely to be free one day where some will spend the rest of their living life there. When they enter into the prison system, they lose more than just being able to wear what they want. They even lose more than just their civil liberties. Gresham Sykes was the first to outline these major deprivations that prisoners go through in his book The Society of Captives. His five major pains, which he calls “pains of imprisonment”, were loss of liberty, loss of autonomy, loss of security, deprivation of heterosexual relationships, and deprivation of goods and services. Matthew Robinson adds onto Sykes’ five pains with three more of his own. His additional pains are loss of voting rights, loss of dignity, …show more content…

Like stated earlier, you lose all sense of being able to do what you want when you want it. Prisoners are told to do virtually everything they do such as when to eat, sleep, wake up, or work. This can cause a huge problem while the prisoner is still in prison and also when the prisoner is finally released. In a study done by Margaret Leigey and Michael Ryder they find that there are three issues that life without parole (LWOP) inmates have. Those issues are, “indeterminacy, permanent separation from family members, and the possibility of mental deterioration as a result of prolonged confinement.” (Leigey and Ryder, 2015, p. …show more content…

Guards will no longer call you by name but by your number. For as long as you are there, you are that number. You no longer are treated like a human being but a number. Prisoners start to lose respect for themselves because of this treatment and on top of that, they are now given an abundance of other labels when they are released. Some of those labels include, “convict,” “criminal,” “dangerous,” and “antisocial.” When labels are given to an offender or a would-be offender in a mean manner, their risk of offending increases. This can also be predicted by the reintegrative shaming

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