The Corrections-Commercial Complex
- 1 April 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Crime & Delinquency
- Vol. 39 (2) , 150-166
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0011128793039002002
Abstract
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.”Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Review essay: Selling justice: Electronic monitoring and the security industryJustice Quarterly, 1992
- An International Perspective on the Privatisation of CorrectionsThe Howard Journal of Criminal Justice, 1992
- The Privatization Of Punishment: Justification, Expectations, And ExperienceCriminal Justice Policy Review, 1989
- Private prisons: Problems within the solutionJustice Quarterly, 1987
- Measuring Degrees of Successful ImplementationEvaluation Review, 1984
- THE AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION, ANTITRUST LEGISLATION AND INTEREST GROUP COALITIONSPolicy Studies Journal, 1983
- Prisons, Production, and Profit: Reconsidering the Importance of Prison IndustriesJournal of Social History, 1980