Prison riot: Difference between revisions
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*[[1990 Strangeways Prison riot|Strangeways Prison riot]], April 1990 |
*[[1990 Strangeways Prison riot|Strangeways Prison riot]], April 1990 |
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* [[New Castle, Indiana|New Castle]], [[Indiana]], April 2007 <ref>[http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D8ON5LNO1&show_article=1 Mayor: 'Full Scale Riot' at Ind. Prison<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
* [[New Castle, Indiana|New Castle]], [[Indiana]], April 2007 <ref>[http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D8ON5LNO1&show_article=1 Mayor: 'Full Scale Riot' at Ind. Prison<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
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*[[Old Montana Prison|1959 Montana State Prison Riot]], 16 April 1959 - 18 April 1959 - 3 people killed |
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==List of Fictional Prison Riots== |
==List of Fictional Prison Riots== |
Revision as of 10:50, 30 December 2008
A prison riot is a type of incident that occurs in the prison environment. It usually refers to a temporary event that is not a routine part of the everyday operation of the prison that involves an act of concerted defiance or disorder by a group of prisoners against the prison administrators, prison officers, or other groups of prisoners in attempt to force change or express a grievance.
Prison riots is an area that has received little academic attention. Of the papers that do exist, they tend to try to draw a connection between prison conditions (such as overcrowding) and riots,[1][2][3] or discuss the dynamics of the modern prison riot.[4][5] In addition, a large proportion of papers focus on specific cases of prison riots.[6][7][8]
Prison conditions
In the late 20th Century the conceptualization of explanations put forward to account for prison disturbances and riots has changed. Initially the actions by prisoners were viewed as irrational. Nevertheless, there is a shift in the form of explanation as external conditions like overcrowding are put forward by the authorities to interpret the events.[9]
Towards the end of the 20th century, the inmate’s narrative of events comes to be reported more often. As the inmates gain more power, they are more likely to be listened to, and their narratives have been observed to be reported. Initially this was in the media, but later they came to be reported in the annual reports and investigations done by the various Ministries and Departments that administered the correctional system in Western nations. Shifts in the style of the media reporting have been a major contributor to this shift in the narrative. So one has to be wary of attributing just the ameliorative reform to the change in the shift of power to the prisoners, as other groups within the figuration have also been empowered like the media and the psy-experts (although the psy-experts may have since lost a lot of power since the 1970’s).[10] The prisoner’s narrative from last century and early this century has not been preserved particularly well, especially in relation to prison riots. The main source of the early prisoner’s narrative is contained in prisoner’s memoirs. This gives a good indication of how little power the prisoners once had, as they did not have the means to express their position, even on the ‘outside’.
Since the inception of the prison there has been a steady shift in the societal perception of the prisoner where now in contrast with the horrific prison conditions of the 18th Century the victim has come to be seen as the prisoner. This has been matched by an increase in the number of prison riots that corrections facilities have been experiencing. We have experienced:
“…the gradual but undeniable lowering in the intensity of punishment…The amelioration of prison conditions in most states and even the legal recognition of prisoners’ rights in some of them, might all be understood as aspects of this more general move in sensibilities.” (Garland 1997:236)[11]
Due to the suffering experienced by prisoners, the imprisonment of offenders came to be seen as a shameful social activity. Consequently there have been attempts to make the prisons invisible while improving the conditions within them. However, it is clear that the increase in the incidence of prison riots prevented the prisons from being hidden.
The sensitivities towards suffering have caused an increase in prison riots and disturbances in a number of ways. When the prisons were initially commissioned for large-scale punishment in New Zealand, the suffering the prisoners experienced was immense, and the social distance between the prison administration and the inmates was very large. The prison administration and the prison officers held a lot of power compared to the inmates and the conceptualization of the prison environment espoused by the prison administration was the most influential. The social distance was so large that the inmates constructed their identity to include feelings of disgrace and worthlessness and they could not act to change their position.[12] The steady amelioration of the prison conditions slowly reduced the social distance between the groups as there was a fundamental shift in power between the groups. The authorities slowly lost power due to increased regulation, while the inmates were slowly empowered. The inmates, as they constructed a vocabulary of dissent and changed their identity, felt that they were in a position to protest as Pratt (1999:289)[13] summarizes:
“Perhaps what we now begin to see is the way in which the process of ameliorative reform, having narrowed the social distance between the established and outsider groups, allowed the prisoners to assume greater confidence in their ability to challenge their oppressors and to slowly undermine the very foundations of the prison edifice itself.”
The increase in violence and destruction in prison riots can be attributed to the decivilizing impact of the ameliorative reform. However, the legacy of identity continued from the 19th century, and as a result, the slow shift in power did not affect the prison riots until after World War II. During this time, the state steadily lost their monopolisation on violence in the prison environment. As the control of violence has fragmented, and the inmates have assumed control of a proportion of violence, then the inmates are more likely to resort to violent means. The loss by the state of the monopoly of violence does not fully explain all the shifts in the characteristics of prison riots, as there was a temporary shift away from violence to that of protesting in the early 1970’s.[14] Therefore, the wider social context needs to be considered in its impact on the types of prison riots taking place. During this period of time there may in effect have been a temporary civilizing of the riots, as the wider social environment espoused values of non-violent protest, which in turn temporarily affected the social behaviour of the prisoners.
List of prison riots
- Alcatraz Island, California, May 1946 - 5 killed
- Attica Prison riots, 1971 - 43 killed
- Dick Conner Correctional Center Riot, December 1983 -
- Fremantle prison riot
- Kingston Penitentiary riots, 1971 - 2 inmates killed
- New Mexico State Penitentiary Riot, 1980 - 33 killed, over 100 injured
- Michoacán, Mexico, July 1988 - 10 killed, 15 injured
- Oklahoma State Penitentiary Riot, July 1973 - lasted an entire weekend, 3 inmates killed; 24 buildings were damaged and only 4 buildings were left usable.
- Oklahoma State Penitentiary "Disturbance", December 1985 - Held a unit for a day.
- Southern Ohio Correctional Facility, Easter Sunday - 1993
- 1992 Carandiru Massacre, São Paulo, Brazil, October 1992 - 111 inmates killed
- Iquique, Chile, May 2001 - at least 28 inmates killed, up to 150 injured
- El Porvenir prison, Honduras, April 2003 - 86 inmates killed
- Camp Bucca, Iraq, January 2005 - 4 inmates killed, 6 injured
- Pavon/Granja Pino Canada/El Hoyon prisons, Guatemala, August 2005 - 35 killed
- San Quentin State Prison, California, January 2006 - at least 25 injured
- North County Correctional Facility, Castaic, California, February 2006 - 1 inmate killed, over 100 injured
- Kabul, Afghanistan, February 2006
- Santa Ana prison in San Cristobal, Tachira Venezuela, December 2007 - 30 inmates killed
- Strangeways Prison riot, April 1990
- New Castle, Indiana, April 2007 [15]
- 1959 Montana State Prison Riot, 16 April 1959 - 18 April 1959 - 3 people killed
List of Fictional Prison Riots
The following is a list of prison riots which have been depicted in various forms of media, including books, film, and television.
- The race riot in the second episode of Season 1 of Prison Break, Allen.
- The riot at Fox River that occurred during Prison Break's first season's two-part episode Riots, Drills, and the Devil.
- Multiple riots occurred in the television series Oz during its six season run.
- In The Simpsons episode The Homer They Fall, a prison riot in progress is halted instantly when imprisoned champion boxer Drederick Tatum petulantly asks the inmates and guards to "Shut up." They apologize and begin extinguishing the flames and tidying up.
- The riot in the film Natural Born Killers[1].
- In the film Blood in Blood out, in San Quentin State Prison, after gangleader Montana was killed.
References
- ^ Bidna, H. (1975). Effects of increased security on prison violence. Journal of Criminal Justice, 3. 33-46.
- ^ Ellis, D. (1984) Crowding and prison violence: Integration of research and theory. Criminal Justice and Behavior, 11 (3). 277-308.
- ^ Gaes, G. (1994). Prison crowding research reexamined. The Prison Journal, 74, (3). 329-363.
- ^ Useem, B. (1985). Disorganization and the New Mexico prison riot of 1980. American Sociological Review, 50 (5). 677-688.
- ^ Newbold, G. (1989). Punishment and Politics: The Maximum Security Prison in New Zealand. Auckland: Oxford University Press.
- ^ Colvin, M. (1982). The 1980 New Mexico prison riot. Social Problems, 29 (5). 449-463.
- ^ Useem, B. and Kimball, P. (1987). A theory of prison riots. Theory and Society, 16 (1). 87-122.
- ^ Dinitz, S. (1991). Barbarism in the New Mexico state prison riot: The search for meaning a decade later. In Kelly, R. and MacNamara, D. (eds.). Perspectives on Deviance: Dominance, Degradation and Denigration. Cincinnati: Anderson Publishing Company.
- ^ Ellis, D. (1984). Crowding and prison violence: Integration of research and theory. Criminal Justice and Behavior, 11 (3). 277-308.
- ^ Pratt, J. (1997). Governing the Dangerous: Dangerousness, Law and Social Change. Sydney: The Federation Press.
- ^ Garland, D. (1997). Punishment and Modern Society: A Study in Social Theory. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
- ^ Pratt, J. (1999). Norbert Elias and the civilized prison. British Journal of Sociology, 50 (2). 271-296.
- ^ Pratt, J. (1999). Norbert Elias and the civilized prison. British Journal of Sociology, 50 (2). 271-296.
- ^ Martinson, R. (1974). What works? Questions and answers about prison reform. The Public Interest, 35. 22-54.
- ^ Mayor: 'Full Scale Riot' at Ind. Prison