The Corrections-Commercial Complex
The current debate about corrections' privatization neglects the extensive overlap of business, political, and private interests that shapes public corrections policy. Based on current developments in the United States it is possible to identify a corrections-commercial complex. As Deep Throat...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Crime and delinquency 1993-04, Vol.39 (2), p.150-166 |
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container_title | Crime and delinquency |
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creator | Lilly, J. Robert Knepper, Paul |
description | The current debate about corrections' privatization neglects the extensive overlap of business, political, and private interests that shapes public corrections policy. Based on current developments in the United States it is possible to identify a corrections-commercial complex. As Deep Throat reportedly said to Washington Post writer Bob Woodward in an underground parking garage after he and Carl Bernstein uncovered the Committee for the Re-election of the President's secret fund in 1972: “Follow the money.” |
doi_str_mv | 10.1177/0011128793039002002 |
format | Article |
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issn | 0011-1287 1552-387X |
language | eng |
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source | Access via SAGE; HeinOnline Law Journal Library; Sociological Abstracts; Periodicals Index Online; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Alma/SFX Local Collection |
subjects | Corporations Imprisonment Penal policy Personnel policies Prisons Private Sector Privatization U.S.A USA |
title | The Corrections-Commercial Complex |
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