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Encyclopedia of Law & Society: American and Global Perspectives

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Encyclopedia of Law & Society: American and Global Perspectives

David S. Clark

Pub. date: 2007 | Online Pub. Date: September 25, 2007 | DOI: 10.4135/9781412952637 | Print ISBN: 9780761923879 | Online ISBN: 9781412952637| Publisher:Sage Publications, Inc.

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Prisons and Jails, Criminology of

Ulla V. Bondeson

Penal institutions as a principle method of punishment of criminal activity date to the beginning of the nineteenth century. In that era, people considered that imprisonment was a rational way to implement the classical penal philosophy of proportionality, in that the time served related to the severity of the crime. However, skepticism about the results of the new Philadelphia and Pennsylvania correctional systems in the United States had already emerged toward the end of the nineteenth century. Some argued that this form of isolation, causing mental diseases, was the greatest penological mistake of the century. Scandinavian correctional statistics demonstrate that the number of persons imprisoned at the beginning of the nineteenth century started around 70 per 100,000 inhabitants. This ratio rose to approximately 180 in the middle of that century, only to drop to approximately 60 at the end of the century, where it stayed in Sweden, Denmark, and Norway ...

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