Dictionary Definition
incarceration n : the state of being imprisoned;
"he was held in captivity until he died"; "the imprisonment of
captured soldiers"; "his ignominious incarceration in the local
jail"; "he practiced the immurement of his enemies in the castle
dungeon" [syn: captivity, imprisonment, immurement]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes: -eɪʃǝn
Noun
- The act of confining, or the state of being confined; imprisonment.
- Formerly, strangulation, as in hernia.
- A constriction of the hernial sac, rendering it irreducible, but not great enough to cause strangulation.
Translations
The act of confining, or the state of being
confined; imprisonment
- Finnish: vangitseminen
- Malayalam: ബന്ധനം, ജയില് വാസം, ജയിലിലാക്കല്
Formerly, strangulation, as in hernia
A constriction of the hernial sac
- Finnish: kurouma
Extensive Definition
Incarceration is the detention of a person in
jail or prison. People are most commonly
incarcerated upon suspicion or conviction of committing a crime. Incarceration rates, when
measured by the United Nations, are considered distinct and
separate from the imprisonment of political
prisoners and others not charged with a specific crime.
Historically, the frequency of imprisonment, its duration, and
severity have varied considerably. There has also been much debate
about the motives for incarceration, its effectiveness and
fairness, as well as debate regarding the related questions about
the nature and etiology
of criminal
behavior.
Punishment vs. Rehabilitation
The above mentioned opinions often inform debates
about the goal of incarceration: should the emphasis be on punishment or rehabilitation?
Arguments have been made on both sides of the issues, and larger
societal perspectives have shifted from one side to the other over
the years.
Those who favor punishment often contend that
the practice serves both as revenge for the wronged and as a
deterrent against
further crime. On the other hand, those who favor rehabilitation
argue that by trying to change a criminal's behavior, recidivism rates can be
reduced, and both the criminal and society can benefit from
improvement.
Justice studies
Penology and
justice studies emphasize description and analysis of antecedents
of criminal behavior and outcomes of consequences imposed by
criminal justice on the criminal behavior. An example of a modern
quantitative study of factors influencing the criminal behavior is
the study by Krus and Hoehl (1994).
In the study by Krus and Hoehl, variables that
might explain differences in incarceration rates among populations
were located by a computer-aided search of the compendium of world
rankings, compiled by the Facts on
File Corporation and the World Model Group, containing over
50,000 records on more than 200 countries.
They argued that predictor variables explained
about 69% of variance in the international incarceration rates.
Cited as especially important were unequal distribution of wealth
(the explanation perhaps favored by liberals) and family
disintegration (the explanation perhaps favored by conservatives).
According to Krus and Hoehl, these variables act in concert: the
presence of one variable does not always precipitate crime, but the
presence of both variables often does precipitate crime.
Incarceration rates by country
The United States' incarceration rate is the highest in the world, at 737 persons imprisoned per 100,000. A report released 2/28/08 indicates that in the United States more than 1 in 100 adults is now confined in an American jail or prison. The United States has 5% of the world's population and 25% of the world's incarcerated population.http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/rds/pdfs2/r188.pdfIn 2006 the incarceration rate in England and
Wales is 139
persons imprisoned per 100,000 residents, while in Norway it is 59
inmates per 100,000, whilst the Australian imprisonment rate is 163
prisoners per 100,000 residents, and the rate of imprisonment in
New Zealand last year was 179 per 100,000.
In 2001 the incarceration rate in China was 111 per
100,000 in 2001 (sentenced prisoners only), although this figure is
highly disputed. Chinese human rights activist Harry Wu, who
spent 19 years in forced-labor camps for criticizing the
government, estimates that 16 to 20 million of his countrymen are
incarcerated, including common criminals, political prisoners, and
people in involuntary job placements. Even ten million prisoners
would mean a rate of 793 per 100,000.
Ireland has the
lowest prison population with 3417 prisoners incarcerated.
Ireland has relatively low crime rates and those rates continue to
fall. Ireland received 101 reports of homicide in 2003. Also reported
were 4763 cases of assault and 2463 sexual offences.
Denmark also has
low incarceration
rate with a total of 3774 inmates in the country. Denmark has 59
people in prison for every 100,000 citizens.
In many countries, it is common for prisoners to
be paroled after serving as little as one third of their sentences.
In the U.S., most states strictly limit parole, requiring that at
least half of a sentence be served. For certain heinous crimes,
there is no parole and the full sentence must be served.
Duration of incarceration
Trends in criminal sentencing in the United States include a move toward determinate as opposed to indeterminate sentencing.Conditions of incarceration
Severe punishments (such as beatings, prolonged
sleep deprivation, sensory deprivation, chaining) have been often
inflicted on prisoners. There are many reasons given for
justification of such punishment. In the 16th century, the Bishop of
Trier, Binsfeld,
in his Tractatus de Confessionibus Maleficorum (1596) claimed
that
-
- since the sinfulness of the world increases, God also allows increasing the severity of punishments.
A movement to abolish cruel treatment of
prisoners began during the Age of
Enlightenment and continued throughout the 19th and 20th
centuries. However, there have been continual arguments for severe
punishments, perhaps increasing somewhat in the early years of the
21st century. Contemporary justifications for such punishment often
revolve around the "rights of the victims". Often underlying these
perspectives are opinions that stress the vindictive
eye-for-the-eye notions of the Old
Testament and Qur'an , over the notion that the primary goal of
incarceration should be the reform and reeducation of prisoners to
facilitate their re-integration into society.
Within the framework of penology, the trend toward
increasing the severity of punishments is reflected in publications
such as Block's (1997, p. 12) advocacy of policy initiatives aimed
at increasing the unpleasantness of prison life that would likely
be "a cost-effective method of fighting crime” and Arpaio and
Sherman's 1996 book claiming that the increase in the severity of
treatment of prisoners will result in decrease in recidivism. Arpaio and
Sherman proposed to increase the severity of imprisonment by the
construction of tent prison camps in the Mojave
Desert where summer temperatures reach 120 degrees Fahrenheit,
by serving prisoners foul-tasting food, by humiliating prisoners by
cross-dressing, and by reinstatement of the chain gangs.
Mauer (1999, pp. 92-93) documents some other the measures used to
implement the increasing the unpleasantness of prison life policies
that include shooting around prisoners to keep them moving, forced
consumption of milk of magnesia, placing naked inmates in strip
cells, and handcuffing inmates for long periods of time.
Incarceration and torture
As noted above, cruel treatment has long been a
feature of incarceration. Taken to extremes, such treatment might
be described as torture.
Torture has, for much of history, been seen as a
tolerable or even necessary component of imprisonment, whether
performed as punishment or as part of
interrogation.
Recent controversial cases described by critics as torture of
incarcerated persons include the
Abu Ghraib military prison in Iraq and the Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba scandal.
Please see the main torture page for further
information.
References
- ABC News/Washington Post poll (2004). Conducted by TNS of Horsham, Pa, on a random national sample of 1,005 adults with a three-point error margin.
- Arpaio, J. and Sherman, L. (1996) How to win the war against crime. Arlington: The Summit Publishing Group.
- Binsfeld, P. (1596) Tractatus de confessionibus maleficorum et sagarum. Trier, Germany: Heinrich Bock.
- Block, M. K. (1997) Supply side imprisonment policy. Washington: National Institute of Justice.
- Beccaria, C. (1764) An essay on crimes and punishments. New York: Gould & Van Winkle, 1809.
- Daneau, L. (1564) Les Sorciers, dialogue très utile et très necessaire pour ce temps. In Levack, B. (1992) The literature of witchcraft: articles on witchcraft, magic, and demonology. Garland. ISBN 0-8153-1026-9.
- Geiler, J. (1508) Die Emeis. Strassburg: Johann Grüninger.
- Kurian, G.T. (1991) The New Book of World Rankings. New York: Facts on File, Inc.
- Krus, D.J. (1999) Die Harte des Strafvollzugs: Entbindung in Ketten. Zeitschrift fur Sozialpsychologie und Gruppendynamik in Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft, 24Jg/Heft 4, S.12-16 (Request reprint in English,in German).
- Krus, D. J., & Hoehl, L .S. (1994) Issues associated with international incarceration rates. Psychological Reports, 75, 1491-1495 (Request reprint).
- Mauer, M. (1991) American Behind Bars: A Comparison of International Rates of Incarceration. Washington, D.C.: The Sentencing Project.
- Mauer, M. (1999) Race to incarcerate. New York: The New Press.
- Mǖllendorf, P. (1911) Geschichte der Spanischen Inquisition. Leipzig, Germany.
- Rhyne, C. E., Templer, D. I., Brown, L. G., & Peters, N. B. (1995) Dimensions of suicide: perceptions of lethality, time, and agony. Suicide & Life Threatening Behavior, 25(3), 373-380.
- Sindelar, B. (1986) Hon na carodejnice v zapadni a stredni Evrope v 16.-17.stoleti. Prague: Nakladatelstvi Svoboda.
Notes
See also
- Incarceration in the United States
- Sentencing Project. U.S. and international info on incarceration.
- Supreme crime
External links
- Race and Incarceration in the United States. Human Rights Watch Press Backgrounder. February 27, 2002. Many tables.
incarceration in French: Emprisonnement en droit
français
incarceration in Occitan (post 1500):
Empresonament
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
beleaguerment, besetment, blockade, blockading, captivity, circumscription, close
arrest, confinement,
cordoning, detention, dismemberment, durance, durance vile, duress, enclosure, envelopment, estrapade, galleys, hard labor, house
arrest, immuration,
immurement, impalement, imprisonment, inclusion, internment, jailing, keelhauling, martyrdom, penal servitude,
picketing, quarantine, railriding, rock pile,
siege, strappado, tar-and-feathering,
term of imprisonment, the gantlet, torment, torture