Dealing With Sub-Groups and Gangs in a Prison System
Dealing With Sub-Groups and Gangs in a Prison System
Annotated Bibliography
Snyder, T. (2000). The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Punishment. Wm. B. Eerdmans
This book deals with the punishment spirit that is saturating culture and its adverse affects on the penal system, gangs, and people in society today. Ingrained in the prison reality experiences, this book gives a real theory about the theological excretions of current punishment culture in the prison system.
Blumstein, Alfred. (2003) “Restorative Justice of US Prison Populations Revisited.” University of Colorado Law Review. Vol. 64
In past years, there has been a massive increase in the prison population and that has made an increase in gangs and subgroups. It is seen that children are committing crime sentences to jail terms will end into their adulthood. Prison system is supervised by different authorities like some prisons are run by corporations under the contract of government. The death penalty, racial profiling, and the rights of the victims are impacting and sometimes split united Methodists and Americans. As there are different authorities running the prison system their dealing with gangs and subgroups is also different some deal with gangs physically and some deals with them in other way, but in most of the united nations prison system gangs are tried to educated them in different fields so that they can help them in the future after their release.
Breton, (2001). The Mystic Heart of Justice: Restoring Wholeness in a Broken World. Swedenborg Foundation
This article is a critical analysis of the current Justice system related to the gangs made in prison. It examines the pervasive feeling of failure, and guilt, the separation sense that all punishment, and external system create.
Donziger, Steven R. (2006). The Real War on Crime: The Report of the National Criminal Justice ...