Stanford Prison Experiment

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Analysis of the Stanford Prison Experiment
The University of the People

Analysis of the Stanford Prison Experiment
The article A study of Prisoners and Guards in a Simulated Prison discusses the Stanford Prison Experiment that took place in 1973 and was conducted by Dr. Zimbardo. The purpose of the execution of this experiment was to find out more about prison life in The United States. The rise in prison riots and why such violence originated. The study proposed by Zimbardo sought to analyze if current prison conditions were due to the “evil in the prisoners” (Haney, C., Banks, W.C. & Zimbardo, P.G., 1973) or if it might actually stem from the guards and staff of the prison who might have alternative motives or deficient …show more content…

This study gathered 24 male college students to participate and who’d be paid 15$ per day of the experiment that could last for up to two weeks. Each of the participants had to take personality tests that assured the participant was physically and mentally stable, mature, and was not involved in anti-social behaviors. Despite careful choosing the experiment was executed with the distribution of roles to ten prisoners and eleven guards randomly. The ones who were assigned to be prisoners had to remain in prison for 24 hours and the guards had to cover 8 hour shifts in groups of 3. The prisoners would not have any privacy for the duration of this experiment and would be stripped of their basic civil rights, but there would be no physical violence. The guards, on the other hand, were given little instruction on how to maintain order in the prison but that they had to fill out reports on the activity of prisoners and unusual occurrences. They were also instructed against the use of …show more content…

The assigned social roles tend to push people to act a certain way. In this case, the norm was that prisoners are submissive and guards are authoritarian. Despite the fact that none of the subjects were actual prisoners, they quickly fell into the behaviors of the roles assigned to them. Prisoners even showed psychosomatic symptoms and guards were disturbed by the idea of stopping the experiment because they were too involved with their roles.
I believe that this study is important today because it helps us understand how easily an assigned role can affect a person psychologically for them to become personally involved and in some cases experience physical consequences. When I read this experiment it shed light on the difficulty that we might face when it comes to class mobility, social development, and gender equality. In these cases, people have been assigned a role by society of poverty, submission to male desires, etc. Thus, when we speak of equality and development we actually have the challenge to provide the tools necessary but also to empower individuals to break from the social

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