What Is Restrictive Segregation?

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One of the numerous misconceptions regarding restrictive housing and segregation is that it deters violence and attempts to correct misbehavior by inmates while preventing others. Administrators of correctional facilities still continues to utilize “threat to institutional security” as one of the predominant arguments for the placement of inmates in segregation. Even the numerous earliest correctional facilities in the united States that were built on a model of extended solitary confinement abandoned their practices in that it proved to be a further obstacle in rehabilitating offenders. Therefore, excessive segregation that generates further psychological harm to inmates, and escalated violence should be terminated throughout the nation, and …show more content…

Disciplinary segregation refers to short-term separation from general population for committing specific infractions, and this sanction is aimed to adequately punish the inmates to deter them from violating the rules again. While, administrative segregation is a long-term form of confinement utilized when an inmate pose a severe threat to the general population or to the security of the institution; and inmates housed in administrative segregation could be confined from months to years. In either case, inmates housed in both types of segregations are tremendously deprived of the only freedoms they have left in prison, and they are subjected to limited or no phone calls, commissary privileges, social visits, inability to possess personal property, exercise time, and most of all they are deprived of access to educational and vocational …show more content…

Solitary confinement remains to be even further harmful to juveniles in that they are deprived of rehabilitative programming. Further, due to their brains not being fully developed yet, including the part of the brain responsible for inhibiting impulses, and weighing in consequences of certain decisions, they are unable to fully cope with the restrictive nature of solitary confinement. Juveniles lack life experiences and the power to control themselves, thus, the lack of social stimulation tremendously effects their development. Both juveniles as well as adults exhibit extreme levels of anxiety, anger, sleep problems, and perceptual disorders while also demonstrating increased frustration, lack of disregard for others, and severe

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