Prison Development in the U.S.

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The United States prison system is an important aspect of today’s society. Without the prison system, there would be no place for the law enforcement agencies to detain the criminals that they have apprehended. Now, prisons today are much nicer than the prisons of the past; it all began with the Pennsylvania system. The Pennsylvania system was “a form of imprisonment developed by the Pennsylvania Quakers around 1790 as an alternative to corporal punishments.” (Schmalleger, 411). This prison that was developed in the 1790s used the means of solitary confinement and pushed for rehabilitation for the inmates (Schmalleger, 411). This new form of imprisonment encouraged society to create other prisons based on the same system, such as the Western Penitentiary in Pittsburgh in 1826 and the Eastern Penitentiary in Cherry Hill, Pennsylvania in 1829. *(411). The Pennsylvania System was the founding principle for future American prison systems.
After the Pennsylvania system, a new system came sweeping across America, and that was the Auburn system, which took place during the “Mass Prison Era” of the mid to late 1800s (Schmalleger, 411). The Auburn system was “a form of imprisonment developed in New York State around 1820 that depended on mass prisons, where prisoners were held in congregate fashion and required to remain silent” (Schmalleger, 411). So this new system came along, and was a competitor to the system that was developed in Pennsylvania. The problem with the Pennsylvania system was that “as prison populations began to grow, however, solitary confinement became prohibitively expensive” (Schmalleger, 411). The Auburn prison was once one of the prisons that followed the Pennsylvania model, but over time, the prison abandoned the ...

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... there are medical programs that take care of the inmates’ medical problems, there are community service programs which some people may serve instead of jail time, and the inmates can even gain an education within the prisons, so many of the concerns of other eras are still addressed today in the prisons (bop.gov). Even in society today they are changing, with more prisons becoming privately run and owned, eventually these private prisons will grow to the size of the state and federal prisons now and will overtake them.

Works Cited

"BOP: Inmate Work Programs." BOP: Inmate Work Programs. N.p., n.d. Web. 01 Dec. 2013.
"Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS)." Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS). N.p., n.d. Web. 30 Nov. 2013.
Schmalleger, Frank. Criminal Justice Today: An Introductory Text for the 21st Century. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education, 2013. Print.

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