Springer Dialectical Anthropology: This Content Downloaded From 207.62.77.131 On Mon, 02 Mar 2020 06:36:11 UTC
Springer Dialectical Anthropology: This Content Downloaded From 207.62.77.131 On Mon, 02 Mar 2020 06:36:11 UTC
Springer Dialectical Anthropology: This Content Downloaded From 207.62.77.131 On Mon, 02 Mar 2020 06:36:11 UTC
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Anthropology
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Dialect Anthropol (2010) 34:575-578
DOI 10.1007/sl0624-010-9214-6
Louis Kontos
L. Kontos (El)
John Jay College, New York, NY, USA
e-mail: lkontos@jjay.cuny.edu
^ Springer
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576 L. Kontos
increasing the possibility of disorder?seems to have played itself out; the 'failure'
of the rehabilitative ideal and alternatives to incarceration has become the stuff of
common knowledge and commonsense. The argument that 'everything' has failed
reinforces the argument that vengeance (just desserts) is a sufficient and worthy goal
of the prison system.
This type of argumentation bears a resemblance to that of eighteenth century
reformers, at least around the idea that the threat of punishment should dissuade
ordinary people from thinking about committing crimes, and around its moralistic
tone. It does not, however, embrace the Christian ideal of redemption, which
motivated the Quakers, nor is it consistent with the Old Testament, which it more
closely resembles. That is, Hebrew Law encouraged compensation in all cases
where harm was done and forbade disproportionate acts of vengeance?hence 'eye
for eye'. The sense of proportion and fairness has been lost in the public and
political discourse about crime, where it has seemed until very recently impossible
to be 'tough' enough. What is the right type and amount of punishment for someone
who has robbed a pedestrian at gun point, or an embezzler who makes off with two
thousand dollars or 200 hundred thousand? Greater public awareness and input is
needed regarding the specifics of punishment.
Public attitudes have softened over the last decade?no one seems to know why.
It is possible that something similar is now happening as during the birth of the
prison in the eighteenth century, as Foucault described it, where the transition from
torture to incarceration as punishment was supported by changing public attitudes
about offenders whose tortured bodies elicited sympathy. Nowadays, the prison
system has entered public consciousness through the high numbers of ex-convicts
who reenter society, upwards to 600 thousand each year. The chances of never
running into someone who has served time in prison are increasingly slim for the
majority of the population. Further, there is now great fascination with the lives of
prison inmates, as can be seen by the popularity of an ever increasing amount of
'reality' television shows about prison. The viewer is left with the feeling of stark
realization, an epiphany of sorts. The absurdity of treating people like wild-caged
animals for however many years and then expecting them to return as productive
members of society is hard to miss when confronted with the reality of prison life?
that is, any slice of it, no matter how it is edited. Perhaps, a similar television
program on the 'process' of reentry would soften public opinion a bit more. Here,
viewers would be treated to the spectacle of people whose debt to society is already
paid in full but who are still not free. They would see people follow (sometimes
arbitrary) rules with exact precision and gain nothing for their troubles.
Bringing the prison system into the forefront of public consciousness will take more
than reality television. The countervailing forces are many: the ongoing 'war' on
crime and drugs is one-sided (it is a war, after all), with arrest and incarceration as a
single mode of response to crime and disorder?predicated in its entirety on the
assumption that non-punitive measures, anything resembling 'alternatives' to
incarceration or involving a concern with prevention or rehabilitation amounts
not only to an inadequate response but a flirtation with danger that is morally
reprehensible because it involves innocent people against their will. The non
believers, the people who argue that the way to create a safer society is primarily
Springer
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The irrationality of the prison-industrial complex 577
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578 L. Kontos
Oliver (this volume) has been out of prison for 10 years and feels that his
sentence has not yet ended. 'I did not ... plead guilty expecting to receive a life
sentence', and as if proving a point, he has harnessed an incredible amount of
discipline and personal resourcefulness and has been accepted into graduate school.
He is published in peer reviewed journals?yet his prison record follows him into
his new life, seemingly derailing it. Oliver lost his graduate assistantship and the
stipend that came with it, with which he was able to live. His experience
underscores the fact that reentry is an uphill battle even when the ex-inmate truly
commits himself to hard work, even when he excels. Kelly (this volume) relates a
similar experience, where social stigma barred him from Wall St., and where
mandated work (in compliance with programs) amounted to a waste of time and
talent that could have been better spent making an honest living while developing an
academic career, which now appears to be happening despite the odds.
The life experiences of these ex-inmates are similar only with regard to the prison
ordeal and problems associated with reentry. If unemployment and not knowing
where the next (or first) meal is coming from is the problem that none can avoid
without substantial assistance from family and friends, it is time to start talking
honestly about this problem. Public attitudes and public policy toward crime and
punishment need to change. The questions that are posed squarely within the reentry
literature can no longer be avoided. If depriving offenders of their freedom is
deemed an appropriate response to crime, how long should they be deprived? Where
does punishment end and freedom begin? If incarceration is supposed to make
society safer, how is safety served by a system that produces the predictable result
of 1/3 of ex-inmates reoffending year after year? What must be done to change this
system?for the sake of fairness (justice) and for safety?
Springer
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