Prisons
The Ties That Bind: The Association Between Social Network Ties, Integration, and Stress Among Incarcerated Women
An Attractive Target: Do Perceptions of Physical Attractiveness Shape Victimization Risks in Women's Prisons?
INFLUENCE OF INCOME AND OTHER FACTORS ON WHETHER CRIMINAL DEFENDANTS GO TO PRISON
PRISONIZATION AND ITS CONSEQUENCES - AN EXAMINATION OF SOCIALIZATION IN A COERCIVE SETTING
MANDATORY PRISON SENTENCES - THEIR PROJECTED EFFECTS ON CRIME AND PRISON POPULATIONS
SURVEYING EX-PRISONERS - PROCEDURES AND PITFALLS
THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES ON ALIENATION IN THE PRISON SOCIETY - AN EMPIRICAL TEST
EMERGING RIGHTS OF THE CONFINED - ACCESS TO THE COURTS AND COUNSEL
Restrictive housing for prison rule violators: Specific deterrence or defiance?
The relationship between participation in structured activities and health, safety and quality of life outcomes for prison residents and staff
Redesigning Life in U.S. Prisons
The prison system in the U.S. typically places a heavy emphasis on security, control, and punishment, and this foundation can create an adversarial culture within correctional facilities — incarcerated individuals versus correctional staff. But what if that culture could change? What would it look like? How would it impact not only incarcerated individuals but also correctional officers and other staff?