Solitary Imprisonment In The Prison System

1363 Words3 Pages

Introduction
Imprisonment has been on the rise throughout the United States in recent years, with a 500% increase in number of incarcerations over the past thirty years. In the United States Federal Prison System, solitary confinement is known as the Special Housing Unit (SHU) typically found in the growing trend of “Supermax” prisons. Solitary confinement is a form of disciplinary punishment used by prison systems in most states in which a prisoner is placed in a separate cell in complete isolation for 22-24 hours a day. These prisoners typically spend a few days at most in isolation, although other circumstances require that an inmate be isolated for prolonged periods. Long-term isolation, typically lasting months to years, occurs when administrators consider certain inmates at risk of escaping or disturbing order in the prison.
While overcrowding and budget concerns are huge issues in prisons that require attention from the state and federal governments, the use of solitary confinement in prisons continues to result in certain negative short and long-term effects on the prisoners and requires immediate attention. Reports of mental health effects and violations of basic human rights have brought attention to the use of solitary confinement in the United States. Has the intended use of solitary confinement in U.S. prisons changed causing unintentional negative effects on the inmates? I will argue that solitary confinement in the U.S. prison system is an expensive, inhumane imprisonment practice that violates the eighth amendment. Solitary confinement, for any length of time, should be illegal and prison systems should incorporate different forms of punishment that do not negatively affect the lives of the inmates to such degree...

... middle of paper ...

...sons view solitary confinement as a short-term solution to controlling disruptive or violent behavior because they lack the resources to provide positive incentives or programming. A lack of resources should not subject inmates to an unjust punishment. A 2011 National Institute of Corrections study found that solitary confinement could be reduced through simply reforming the classification system of inmates who are candidates for solitary confinement (Rodriguez 2012). Creating more strict policies pertaining to the administration of solitary confinement has been found to decrease violence and the need for violent cell extractions. Solitary confinement can be used as a penal strategy, a tool of moral reform or behavior modification, or as a risk-management tool. Supermax prisons fail to meet most of their declared goals by imposing these financial and societal costs.

Open Document