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Prison Management

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Prison Management Governing Prisons Corrections Officers Prisons as unique organizations (vs. UMD or General Motors) Don t select clients Have little or no control ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Prison Management


1
Prison Management
  • Governing Prisons
  • Corrections Officers

2
Prisons as unique organizations (vs. UMD or
General Motors)
  • Dont select clients
  • Have little or no control over release
  • Clients held against their will
  • Clients do most of the daily work in the
    institution (and are not really paid)
  • Depends on the relationships between staff
    clients

3
How best to run prison?
  • The Old Penology
  • PN vs Auburn model, prison farms, etc.
  • Use of corporal punishment
  • Sociological Research/Implications
  • Interest in inmate culture, argot roles,
    prisonization, and so forth
  • Not interested in helping the man control
    inmates
  • Implies that running a prison demands the
    cooperation of inmates (CO-inmate agreement,
    tolerate some violations, etc.)

4
John DiIulio Governing Prisons (1986)
  • Approaches issue from policy/political science
    background
  • What is a good prison?
  • Confinement model
  • Order, amenity, security
  • Comparison of three prison systems
  • TX control model
  • MI responsibility model
  • CA consensual model
  • Concludes TX is best, and suggests much of the
    prison violence in 1960s/70s due to lax,
    liberal management

5
DiIulio II
  • Critique
  • Was prison violence of the 1970s due to
    lax/permissive management?
  • The exceptional leader theory of prison
    management
  • Defects in the TX system
  • Building Tenders
  • CO use of physical coercion
  • Collapse of TX system in 1980s
  • Importance of Book MANAGEMENT MATTERS

6
Manager Styles
  • Authoritarian
  • gives orders, manages details, controls all (TOP
    DOWN)
  • Joseph Ragen (Stateville until 1960s)
  • George Beto (TX until 1970s, Walking George)
  • Laissez-faire
  • Little/no direction (do what you think is best)
  • Maybe for hospitals (highly trained staff) but
    probably not prisons
  • Democratic/participatory
  • See, A Model Prison box in Clear et al. book
  • Inmates pool funds to buy amenities, town hall
    meetings

7
Unit Management
  • Used heavily in the federal BOP and many states
    (more popular of late)
  • Divide prison into small units
  • Greatly aided by architecture (pods)
  • Units more manageable
  • Team approach (CO and caseworkers)
  • Better career ladder
  • Restrict inmate movement

8
Corrections Officers
  • How do COs maintain control over the inmate
    population?
  • Hassine?
  • Conover?
  • Bases of Power
  • Legit (power b/c of position)
  • Coercive (ability to punish)
  • Reward (ability to reward)
  • Expert (special knowledge, skill, professional
    judgment)
  • Referent (gain respect)

9
Influences on Power
  • What dictates the type of power that is most
    important to a CO?
  • Environment/Structure
  • Coercion less likely in a centralized bureaucracy
  • Expert more valued and training more likely
  • Attitudes/Roles
  • More social distance less referent/expert power
  • Custody orientation more coercive
  • Type of prison (Rx or Custody)
  • Rx depends upon more referent/expert power

10
Marquart (1986)
  • The extent and nature of the use of coercive
    force
  • Qualitative/participatory studyCO in the Texas
    Department of Corrections
  • Ass Whooping and Tune up relatively common.
  • Part of CO subculture (build cohesion), how
    officers got better post or were promoted,
    maintain control model
  • More common among young

11
Job Satisfaction/Burnout
  • Why Important?
  • What predicts burnout/intention to quit?
  • Importation (Gender, Race, Education, etc.)
  • Weak effects, but nonwhite, female, more
    education hold more negative attitudes
  • Deprivation (Perception of Danger)
  • Danger is 1 predictor (mean r .26)
  • Management (Supervisor Support, Role conflict)
  • Role conflict (r .22), Support (r -.16)

12
CO Basics
  • Corrections Officers
  • More popular now (move up ranks, money is a bit
    better, more qualfications)
  • Median federal around 40K (State 32K, Private
    22K)
  • Job prospects good
  • Corrections Counselors
  • More requirements (psychology degrees) and earn
    more money (case manager, counselor)
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