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The American Prison System

Decent Essays

Nowadays, when criminals are being convicted for acts like murder and other high terror threats, courts and jurors usually try to figure out if there’s a mental problem or disorder that contributes to the criminal’s reasoning. The history and transformation of American prisons since the eighteenth century has widely shaped the conception that an inmate’s sanity and their wellbeing should be taken into account with prison placement. The first prisons, realizations and shifts in the system throughout time, as well as the shift in thought have all contributed to this idea. Although, not all criminal’s mental health has a direct correlation to their crimes, the two go hand and hand when thinking about the incarcerated as a whole.

The first prisons …show more content…

Multiple reform acts were passed around this subject, the very first being The Penitentiary Act, which was created to “ensure the prison system would work effectively and humanely” (“Breathing Through Bars: A Brief History on the Prison System in America”). The new and refurbished American prisons began to serve as models for the British ones, although they still weren’t completely acceptable. Shortly after the Civil War which ended in 1865 when the slaves were freed and slavery was abolished, “thousands of inmates had perished in deadly prison camps kept by [the prison’s] own countrymen. More were badly scarred by what they had experienced” (“Prisons: History – Reform and Individualized Treatment”). Shortly after in 1867, in Report on the Prisons and Reformatories in the United States and Canada done by two prison reformers Enoch Wines and Theodore Dwight, they stated the administrative system that had once worked was becoming corrupted and abuse in the prison environments was taking place. This action can be credited to leading to “the Prison Commission in 1877, which allowed local prisons to be controlled centrally” (“Breathing Through Bars: A Brief History on the Prison System in America”). This new act contributed to prisons becoming more effective. Realizations kept growing around the fact that rights needed to be made for the incarcerated as more time

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