Time and Punishment in an Anesthetic World Order

In Mechthild Nagel & Seth Nii Asumah (eds.), Prisons and Punishment: Reconsidering Global Penality. pp. 71-75 (2007)
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Abstract

"Do the Crime, Do the Time," is a commonplace formula for the meaning of incarceration. But time is precisely what a person is prevented from doing under conditions of incarceration. The prison regime becomes increasingly inhuman as time is displaced, represented in the extreme manifestation of solitary confinement, where all meaning of time is purged to the point that "the box" in New York houses 4.4 percent of inmates and accounts for 31.6 percent of suicides as reported in 2001.

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Greg Moses
Texas State University

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Feminist perspectives on class and work.Ann Ferguson - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

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