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Prisons & Prisoners

Selected Books

America's Prisons: Opposing Viewpoints
HV9471.A486 2006
Opposing views are presented on topics of violence, drugs, privatization of prisons, etc.
 
Cox, Stephen
The Big House: Image and Reality of the American Prison
HV9469.C694 2009
A detailed and vivid historical study of American penal institutions and their evolution from the "Big House" like Alcatraz, to smaller prisons where the emphasis is on rehabilitation.
 
Ratner, Michael
America's Disappeared: Secret Imprisonment, Detainees, and the War on Terror
HV9471.A484 2005
America's Disappeared deals with the constitutionality of the abuses following September 11, 2001: racial profiling, detentions and deportations by the United States government.
 
Schwartz, Sunny
Dreams from the Monster Factory: A Tale of Prison, Redemption, and One Woman's Fight to Restore Justice to All
HV9306.S27 S38 2009
Dreams from the Monster Factory presents an intimate, harrowing, and revelatory chronicle of how one woman with a profound belief in people's ability to change is transforming the San Francisco jails -- the monster factories -- and the criminals incarcerated there. Read a review in the New York Review of Books.
 

Browse the Catalog

For additional titles browse the catalog under the subjects:

 

Web Sites

  • 360degrees: Perspectives on the American Criminal Justice System
    This website, a production of Picture-Projects (producers of documentaries) tells first-person stories of inmates, corrections officers, victims of crime, judges and others. Presented with a unique combination of Real Audio and QTVR panoramas, visitors to the site can pan around prison cells, judges chambers, squad cars, living rooms and street corners while listening to audio diaries.
  • American Civil Liberties Union: Prisoner's Rights
    A "tough on crime" approach to criminal justice induced a trend of overcrowded prisons and jails with deteriorating structures and prisoner violence, overwhelmed correctional officers who grow younger and more inexperienced because of accelerated burnout and turnover, and inadequately financed medical care systems, work, education, and drug treatment programs.
  • American Correctional Association
    A multi-disciplinary organization of professionals representing all facets of corrections & criminal justice, including federal, state, and military correctional facilities and prisons, county jails and detention centers, probation/parole agencies, and community corrections/halfway houses.
  • Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice
    A private non-profit organization whose mission is to reduce society's reliance on the use of incarceration as a solution to social problems. Headquartered in San Francisco, California.
  • Commission on Safety and Abuse in America's Prisons
    On June 8, 2006, the Commission released Confronting Confinement, a report on violence and abuse in U.S. jails and prisons, the broad impact of those problems on public safety and public health, and how correctional facilities nationwide can become safer and more effective.
  • Correctional Education Association
    A non-profit, professional association serving educators and administrators who provide services to students in correctional settings.
  • Corrections.com
    This commercial site shows the industry developed around prisons. Check here for "The Industry's Leading Organizations" including food services and health services.
  • Death Penalty Curricula for High School
    This Web site and its accompanying materials are designed to assist both teachers and students in an exploration of capital punishment, presenting arguments for and against its use, as well as issues of ethics and justice that surround it. The site was principally designed by the Michigan State Communications Technology Laboratory; factual content was provided by the Death Penalty Information Center (DPIC), a non-profit organization that conducts research on issues related to capital punishment; funding for the project was provided by grants from the Soros Foundation and the Columbia Foundation.

  • National Reentry Resource Center
    The National Reentry Resource Center, established by the Second Chance Act (Public Law 110-199) and administered by the Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice, provides education, training, and technical assistance to states, tribes, territories, local governments, service providers, non-profit organizations, and corrections institutions working on prisoner reentry.
  • New York Times: Prisons and Prisoners
    Recent articles and a list of resources from around the Web about Prisons and Prisoners as selected by researchers and editors of The New York Times.
  • Pew Public Safety
    Launched in 2006 as an operating project of The Pew Charitable Trusts, the Public Safety Performance Project seeks to help states advance fiscally sound, data-driven policies and practices in sentencing and corrections that protect public safety, hold offenders accountable, and control corrections costs.
    • Public Safety, Public Spending: Forecasting America’s Prison Population 2007-2011
      This report is the first known attempt to determine the future growth of the nation’s state and federal prison systems as a whole. Its findings show that America’s prison population will continue its extraordinary growth in the coming years, with more than 192,000 prisoners added by 2011. This growth will carry a heavy fiscal burden, estimated at up to $12.5 billion in new prison construction and $15 billion in operations costs.
  • Prison Fellowship International
    Prison Fellowship (PF) is a Christian ministry responding to the needs of prisoners, ex-prisoners, victims and those affected by crime. Prison Fellowship International (PFI) is the global association of national Prison Fellowship organizations and operates through a General Secretariat located in Washington DC, USA and five regional offices located in Switzerland, Zimbabwe, New Zealand, Singapore, and Peru.
  • Prison Fellowship Ministries
    Prison Fellowship Ministries is a not-for-profit, volunteer-based organization with one mission: exhort, equip, and assist the Church in its ministry to prisoners, ex-prisoners, victims, and their families, and to promote biblical standards of justice in the criminal justice system.
  • The Sentencing Project
    An independent source of criminal justice policy analysis, data and program information for the public and policy-makers. Their 1998 report, "Losing the Vote: The Impact of Felony Disenfranchisement Laws in the United States ," found that "the scale of felony voting disenfranchisement in the U.S. is far greater than in any other nation and has serious implications for democratic processes and racial inclusion."
  • UNICOR
    UNICOR is the trade name for Federal Prison Industries, Inc., a self-sustaining enterprise, that sells services products made by inmates of federal prisons.
  • US Department of Justice: Federal Bureau of Prisons
    The Federal prison system is a nationwide system of prisons (96 institutions) and detention facilities for the incarceration of inmates who have been sentenced to imprisonment for Federal crimes and the detention of individuals awaiting trial in Federal court. The federal prison population has multiplied six times from 1980 when it was 24,000, to the present when it is 143,000. 58% of the offenses are drug offenses.
  • US Department of Justice: National Institute of Corrections
    The NIC is a center of correctional learning and experience that advances and shapes effective correctional practice and public policy that respond to the needs of corrections through collaboration and leadership and by providing assistance, information, education, and training.
  • Village Voice: "Roaming Rikers"
    A Two-Part Special Report on Prison and Its Aftermath by Jennifer Gonnerman from the December 13 - 19, 2000 issue. "This year, the United States achieved a dubious distinction: It surpassed Russia as the world leader in imprisonment, with one in every 130 people living behind bars. The U.S. prison population has soared above 2 million, and most of those inmates are locked up for nonviolent crimes."
 

Pittsburgh Region

  • Allegheny County Jail
    The website includes history of the jail and information on the new jail but with no photos of either the old or new jail. Other information available is Volume of Activity, In-Jail Programs & Activities, Visitor Information, Annual Statistics, and Annual Report.
  • Lydia's Place, Inc.
    An interdenominational, interracial, Christian agency dedicated to serving the holistic needs of women offenders. Provides a continum of care - from prison, through transition, to stability.
  • Pennsylvania Department of Corrections
    If you view the monthly population report, you will see that almost all Pennsylvania facilities are filled to overcapacity. Below are Southwestern Pennsylvania State Correctional Institutions.

  • Pittsburgh Child Guidance Foundation
    Some 7,000 children have a parent in jail or prison in Allegheny County. The number of parents behind bars has risen more than 400% in the past three decades. The Pittsburgh Child Guidance Foundation (PCGF) works to increase the awareness of the impact of a parent's incarceration on young children and address it through two major projects, a Family Activity Center and a Systems Advocate who works with families and children.
  • Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: Bill urged to find new ways to reduce prison population
    Pennsylvania's prison population is the fastest growing in the nation, five times greater than it was 30 years ago, and the price per prisoner has nearly tripled from $11,447 a year in 1980 to $32,059 in 2009, according to data from Auditor General Jack Wagner's office. Prison population growth is the fastest growing component of state expenditures and a natural target for cost-containment and for cost reduction by keeping nonviolent offenders (40 percent of the prison population) out of prison. (4/2/2011)
  • Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: County jail death rate is among highest
    A May 08, 2011, article by Rich Lord that reports that Allegheny Correctional Health Services, a nonprofit offshoot of the county, handles health care at the jail, at a cost of around $12 million a year. "On its watch, the jail was one of the dozen deadliest among the nation's 50 largest county jails from 2000 through 2007, and its five deaths in each of 2009 and 2010 gave it a mortality rate more than twice the state average."
  • Renewal, Inc.
    A private, non-profit organization that is dedicated to the renewal of individuals in the criminal justice system and to their return to society as responsible citizens. Renewal offers a work release facility, intensive inpatient drug and alcohol rehab facility and outpatient drug and alcohol and MH/MR counseling.
 

Pennsylvania

  • Pennsylvania Board of Pardons
    In the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the Board of Pardons reviews criminal cases, except impeachment to determine whether clemency should be recommended to the Governor for his approval or denial. Includes "How to Apply for a Pardon"
  • Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole
    includes special announcements and general information on the Board's organization and programs. Also available is a website of parole absconders, information on victim services, and the Sexual Offenders Assessment Board (Megan's Law).
  • Pennsylvania Correctional Industries
    PCI is a Bureau of the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections that operates as a private business, generating its own working capital by selling items that inmates produce. PCI's inmate work program reduces institutional management problems, provides inmates with vocational training and work experience, promotes public safety and contributes to the economy.
  • Pennsylvania Department of Corrections
    Provides statistics about the prison population, services for victims, an inmate locator, a state correctional institution locator map, visitor rules, a Handbook for the Families and Friends of prison inmates. Many documents are in PDF format requiring Adobe Acrobat. From 1989 to 1999 the average daily prison population in Pennsylvania increased 68% from 16,379 to 27,650. There's also information about the Department of Corrections History, Policies, and Programs as well as information on the Death Penalty in Pennsylvania.
  • Pennsylvania Department of Corrections: Inmate Voting Rights
    Certain prisoners and exprisoners can vote. Check here for the regulations on Voting Rights of Convicted Felons, Convicted Misdemeanants and Pretrial Detainees.