The Pros And Cons Of Private Prisons

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In the simplest form, a private or for-profit prison is a place where individuals are jailed by a third party, which is contracted by a government agency. Private prisons have been dubbed “dungeons for dollars” (Yeoman). Typically, governments enter contractual agreements with private prisons that demand a monthly rate for each prisoner in the facility. Companies such as the Nashville-based Corrections Corporation of America, along with it's competitor, GEO Group, lure government officials with lower rates and a worry-free solution. Private prisons are sold as a simple solution for a growing incarcerated population. Private prisons are known to command high occupancy rates, commonly as high as the 90th percentile, or governments are forced to pay hefty fines. Private prisons encourage needless incarnation for victimless crimes; along with robbing humanity of progressive ideals such as drug legalization and rehabilitating criminals versus incarnation.
Companies such as Corrections Corporation of America & GEO Group are selling their services as a worry-free solution to dealing with the incarcerated population, while saving money in the process. Some of the tactics private prisons use to save money are understaffing, not training staff, lax security measures and even allowing cable TV versus hiring more guards. These tactics do not work, as researchers from the U.S. General Accounting Office show “no substantial evidence” was found in proving that for-profit prisons conserve taxpayer dollars. In Arizona, prisons were privatized with one stipulation; it must save money. The state’s own data contradicted the idea, with the per-inmate cost in private prisons as high as sixteen-hundred dollars greater per diem, or three and a half m...

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... benefit from abusing the system. With government prisons, there is no incentive to keep prisoners longer than absolutely necessary. Consequently, private prisons have great incentive to incarnate people as long as possible, as the inmate is able to be exploited for low-cost labor. Prisoners are treated with little to no care, and are not rehabilitated to societal standards before returning to society, vastly increasing their chances of committing crimes again. Laborers in the prison industry will be hired at an absolute minimum, and will be trained at a lower standard, or not at all. Since guards are not properly trained, prisoners are able to escape significantly easier, to create greater havoc in the cities surrounding them. The only real beneficiaries of the private prison system are the prison owners, and the politicians that are supported by the prison owners.

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