The Hidden Life of Polish Prisons / Paweł Moczydłowski.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Original language: Polish Series: Book collections on Project MUSEPublisher: Bloomington : Indiana University Press, [1992]Manufacturer: Baltimore, Md. : Project MUSE, 2022Copyright date: ©[1992]Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780253061683
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Online resources:
Contents:
Foreword / Hal Pepinsky -- pt. I. Thou Shalt Not Do Much Research. 1. A Reserved Terrain. 2. Prison Paranoia. 3. Learning from the Failure of Previous Studies. 4. To Do the Study in Any Way Possible. 5. Prisons Selected for the Study -- pt. II. Behind the Facade of Formal Organization. 6. Among "Crooks" 7. Between the "Screws" and the "Crooks" 8. Among the "Screws" 9. Social Relations in "Hidden Life."
Review: "The first behind-the-walls look at the "hidden life" of Polish prisons, this book penetrates the inmates' facade of silence and deception toward outsiders and presents a vivid portrait of the prison's secret social organization."--BOOK JACKET. "In Poland, as in the United States, the stated aim of imprisonment is to resocialize inmates to prepare them to reenter normal society. But in a country where every eighth adult male has gone to prison, over 30 percent more than once, the efficacy of incarceration has been called into question. Moczydtowski set out to discover that feature of prison which might account for the failure of the penal system. He found it in the prison's unique social structure."--BOOK JACKET. "The secret life of prisons, he finds, is generated by three groups of relations: in the prisoners' community, in the community of prison functionaries, and in the relations between the prisoners and the functionaries. His description of the origins and functions of these hidden relationships is both a unique look at life behind bars in an Eastern European country and an important contribution to comparative criminology."--BOOK JACKET.
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Foreword / Hal Pepinsky -- pt. I. Thou Shalt Not Do Much Research. 1. A Reserved Terrain. 2. Prison Paranoia. 3. Learning from the Failure of Previous Studies. 4. To Do the Study in Any Way Possible. 5. Prisons Selected for the Study -- pt. II. Behind the Facade of Formal Organization. 6. Among "Crooks" 7. Between the "Screws" and the "Crooks" 8. Among the "Screws" 9. Social Relations in "Hidden Life."

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"The first behind-the-walls look at the "hidden life" of Polish prisons, this book penetrates the inmates' facade of silence and deception toward outsiders and presents a vivid portrait of the prison's secret social organization."--BOOK JACKET. "In Poland, as in the United States, the stated aim of imprisonment is to resocialize inmates to prepare them to reenter normal society. But in a country where every eighth adult male has gone to prison, over 30 percent more than once, the efficacy of incarceration has been called into question. Moczydtowski set out to discover that feature of prison which might account for the failure of the penal system. He found it in the prison's unique social structure."--BOOK JACKET. "The secret life of prisons, he finds, is generated by three groups of relations: in the prisoners' community, in the community of prison functionaries, and in the relations between the prisoners and the functionaries. His description of the origins and functions of these hidden relationships is both a unique look at life behind bars in an Eastern European country and an important contribution to comparative criminology."--BOOK JACKET.

In English, translated from the Polish.

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