Keramet A. Reiter
Series Editor Henry N. Pontell
In this brief, timely text, Keramet Reiter explores the least visible, but arguably most important, characteristics of mass incarceration in the United States: the systematic constriction of prisoners' constitutional rights; the treatment of the mentally ill in prison; the long-term consequences
of having served time in prison; the problem of prisoner disenfranchisement; and the privatization of multiple aspects of the prison industry. Each chapter begins with a narrative account of one individual's experience within the prison system, drawn from actual cases and recent events that frame
the history, themes, and core ethical questions addressed in that chapter.
About the Series
Keynotes in Criminology and Criminal Justice provides essential knowledge on important contemporary matters of crime, law, and justice to a broad audience of readers. Volumes are
written by leading scholars in that area. Concise, accessible, and affordable, these texts are designed to serve either as primers around which courses can be built or as supplemental books for a variety of courses.
Introduction
Timeline of Key Laws, Cases, and Events
1. The Exception to Every Rule: Constitutional Exemptions and Limitations
2. The Prison within the Prison: Mental Illness and Punitive Tools of Control
3. The Gift that Keeps on Giving: Collateral Consequences and Expanded
Punishments
4. The Silenced Majority: Voting Rights and Prison-Based Gerrymandering
5. Prisons for Profit: Privatization and the Prison Industrial Complex
Conclusion
There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.
Keramet Reiter is Assistant Professor in the Department of Criminology, Law & Society and at the School of Law at the University of California, Irvine. She is the author of 23/7 Pelican Bay Prison and the Rise of Long-Term Solitary Confinement and the coeditor of Extreme Punishment:
Comparative Studies in Detention, Incarceration, and Solitary Confinement (2015). Dr. Reiter recently won the American Society of Criminology's Ruth Cavan Young Scholar Award.
Series Editor, Henry N. Pontell, is a Distinguished Professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City
University of New York.
Making Sense - Margot Northey and Joan McKibbin
White-Collar and Corporate Crime - Gilbert Geis
Series Editor Henry N. Pontell
The Roots of Danger - Elliott Currie
Series Editor Henry N. Pontell
Financial Crime and Crises in the Era of False Profits - Robert Tillman, Henry N. Pontell and William K. Black
Correctional Contexts - Edward Latessa and Alexander Holsinger
Please check back for the special features of this book.