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Home » prison-industrial complex

prison-industrial complex

Prisons, Imprisonment and Alternatives

Prisons are among the most visible and contested institutions of modern societies. They represent the state’s ultimate power to deprive individuals of liberty, justified in the name of justice, order, and security. Yet the prison is not a timeless or natural institution: it emerged historically under specific social, political, and cultural conditions. In criminology and

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Nils Christie, 2007

Nils Christie – Crime Control as Industry (1993)

Crime Control as Industry: Towards GULAGS, Western Style? is one of the most influential works in critical criminology. Published in 1993 by Norwegian criminologist Nils Christie, the book delivers a stark critique of modern penal systems, particularly the alarming growth of incarceration in Western democracies. Christie likens the penal apparatus to a profit-oriented industry and

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Michelle Alexander, 2011

Michelle Alexander – The New Jim Crow (2010)

The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness is a groundbreaking work by civil rights lawyer and legal scholar Michelle Alexander. Published in 2010, the book argues that the U.S. prison system operates as a contemporary system of racial caste, replacing earlier forms of racial control such as slavery and segregation. With

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Portrait: Angela Y. Davis, 2019

Angela Y. Davis – Are Prisons Obsolete? (2003)

With her concise and powerful book Are Prisons Obsolete?, published in 2003, American activist and scholar Angela Y. Davis delivers a fundamental critique of the prison system in the United States. She argues that the prison has become a normalized and invisible institution—deeply embedded in the fabric of modern society—despite its racist, classist, and patriarchal

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SozTheo is a personal academic project by Prof. Dr. Christian Wickert.

The content does not reflect the official views or curricula of HSPV NRW.

SozTheo.com offers clear, accessible introductions to sociology and criminology. Covering key theories, classic works, and essential concepts, it is designed for students, educators, and anyone curious about social science and crime. Discover easy-to-understand explanations and critical perspectives on the social world.

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