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American Prison 1st Edition Shane Bauer

  • SKU: BELL-31443838
American Prison 1st Edition Shane Bauer
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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American Prison 1st Edition Shane Bauer instant download after payment.

Publisher: Penguin
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 32.29 MB
Pages: 368
Author: Shane Bauer
ISBN: 9780735223592, 9780735223585, 0735223599, 0735223580
Language: English
Year: 2018
Edition: 1

Product desciption

American Prison 1st Edition Shane Bauer by Shane Bauer 9780735223592, 9780735223585, 0735223599, 0735223580 instant download after payment.

An enraging, necessary look at the private prison system, and a convincing clarion call for prison reform.” —NPR.org 
A ground-breaking and brave inside reckoning with the nexus of prison and profit in America: in one Louisiana prison and over the course of our country's history. In 2014, Shane Bauer was hired for $9 an hour to work as an entry-level prison guard at a private prison in Winnfield, Louisiana. An award-winning investigative journalist, he used his real name; there was no meaningful background check. Four months later, his employment came to an abrupt end. But he had seen enough, and in short order he wrote an exposé about his experiences that won a National Magazine Award and became the most-read feature in the history of the magazine Mother Jones. Still, there was much more that he needed to say. In American Prison, Bauer weaves a much deeper reckoning with his experiences together with a thoroughly researched history of for-profit prisons in America from their origins in the decades before the Civil War. For, as he soon realized, we can't understand the cruelty of our current system and its place in the larger story of mass incarceration without understanding where it came from. Private prisons became entrenched in the South as part of a systemic effort to keep the African-American labor force in place in the aftermath of slavery, and the echoes of these shameful origins are with us still. The private prison system is deliberately unaccountable to public scrutiny. Private prisons are not incentivized to tend to the health of their inmates, or to feed them well, or to attract and retain a highly-trained prison staff.

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