Foreword One of the most daunting challenges confronting our criminal justice system today is the overcrowding of our nation's prisons. The past decade has witnessed a doubling of the number of adult offenders brought before our courts. According to one estimate, as we begin the new millennium, the nation's inmate population approaches the 2 million mark. Securing and humanely housing such a large population has placed an enormous burden on prison administrators as well as the federal, state, and local jurisdictions that must finance the institutional confinement of so many inmates. In the 1980s, the public's frustration over a perceived failure of the penal system to rehabilitate offenders and a reluctance to provide more funding for correctional institutions, coupled with the increasing demand for more jail space, precipitated a crisis. One proposed solution that emerged was the privatizing of prisons and jails by contracting out, in part or in whole, their operations. In 1987, the number of inmates incarcerated in privately operated correctional facilities worldwide was 3,100; by 1998 the number had risen to 132,000. In the United States today there is a total of 158 private correctional facilities. Proponents of privatization have suggested that allowing the facilities to be operated by the private sector could result in cost reductions of 20 percent. To explore the issues pertaining to the privatization of prisons, the Bureau of Justice Assistance funded a nationwide study that has resulted in this monograph, Emerging Issues on Privatized Prisons. The monograph examines the historical factors that gave rise to the higher incarceration rates, fueling the privatization movement, and the role played by the private sector in the prison system. It outlines the arguments, both in support of and opposition to, privatized prisons, reviews current literature on the subject, and examines issues that will have an impact on future privatizations. An appendix provides practical guidelines for policymakers who are considering privatizing a facility. The study resulted in some interesting conclusions. For example, it was discovered that, rather than the projected 20-percent savings, the average saving from privatization was only about 1 percent, and most of that was achieved through lower labor costs. Nevertheless, there were indications that the mere prospect of privatization had a positive effect on prison administration , making it more responsive to reform. It is hoped that this monograph will prove enlightening to those involved with the issue of privatized prisons and promote a …
[1]
Andrés Solimano.
Issues and Evidence
,
2003
.
[2]
Janet Treasure,et al.
The United Kingdom experience
,
2002
.
[3]
D. Shichor.
Privatizing Correctional Services
,
1999
.
[4]
C. W. Thomas,et al.
A Comparative Recidivism Analysis of Releasees from Private and Public Prisons
,
1999
.
[5]
Eric Schlosser,et al.
The Prison Industrial Complex
,
1998
.
[6]
Martin E. Gold.
The Privatization of Prisons
,
1996
.
[7]
Douglas C. McDonalo.
PUBLIC IMPRISONMENT BY PRIVATE MEANS The Re-emergence of Private Prisons and Jails in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia
,
1994
.
[8]
J. Marquart,et al.
Private prisons in Texas: The new penology for profit
,
1993
.
[9]
David N. Ammons,et al.
The Option of Prison Privatization: A Guide for Community Deliberations
,
1992
.
[10]
D. Mcdonald.
Private Penal Institutions
,
1992,
Crime and Justice.
[11]
G. W. Bowman,et al.
Privatizing the United States justice system : police, adjudication, and corrections services from the private sector
,
1992
.
[12]
Robert D. McCrie.
THREE CENTURIES OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE PRIVATIZATION IN THE UNITED STATES
,
1992
.
[13]
C. Logan.
Well Kept: Comparing Quality of Confinement in Private and Public Prisons
,
1992
.
[14]
Martin P. Sellers.
Private and Public Prisons: A Comparison of Costs, Programs and Facilities
,
1989
.
[15]
I. P. Robbins.
Privatization of Corrections: Defining the Issues
,
1987
.
[16]
J. Hackett.
Issues in Contracting for the Private Operation of Prisons and Jails
,
1987
.
[17]
J. V. Campbell.
… and in the United Kingdom
,
1987
.
[18]
P. Kratcoski.
Correctional Counseling and Treatment
,
1981
.
[19]
R. B. Pugh.
Imprisonment in Medieval England
,
1968
.