BookRags.com Literature Guides Literature
Guides
Criticism & Essays Criticism &
Essays
Questions & Answers Questions &
Answers
Lesson Plans Lesson
Plans
My BibliographyPeriodic TableU.S. PresidentsShakespeare Sonnet Shake-Up
Research Anything:        
History | Encyclopedias | Films | News | Create a Bibliography | More... Login | Register | Help


America 1950-1959: Law and Justice

Print-Friendly  Order the PDF version  Order the RTF version
About 65 pages (19,415 words)
1950s Summary

Bookmark and Share Questions on this topic? Just ask!

Prison Life in the 1950s

A World Behind Bars.

Americans of the 1950s did not like to dwell on one aspect of the growing crime problem: the nation's increasingly crowded prisons. By the end of the decade, the U.S. prison population — 22,492 men and women in federal penitentiaries, 185,021 in state facilities — equaled the population of a city the size of Tulsa, Oklahoma. They made sure, often in violent ways, that the outside world could not ignore them. Between 1950 and 1953 people were shocked by a succession of riots in federal and state penitentiaries around the country, twenty in 1952 alone. With a few shameful exceptions, prisons in America were more humane than they had ever been. Yet convicts from New Jersey to Louisiana to California were demonstrating that something was fundamentally wrong with the penitentiary system.

An Abiding Question.

Were prisons intended to reform convicts, to punish them, or simply.....

    
    

    This is a free excerpt of 150 words. This section contains 741 words. This article contains 19,415 words (approx. 65 pages at 300 words per page).

    Read the rest of this Article with our America 1950-1959: Law and Justice Access Pass.

    Copyrights
    America 1950-1959: Law and Justice from American Decades. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.

    Join BookRagslearn moreJoin BookRags




    About BookRags | Customer Service | Report an Error | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
     
    szmtag Quantcast