Literature DB >> 30220730

Discourses of Mass Probation: From Managing Risk to Ending Human Warehousing in Michigan.

Michelle S Phelps1.   

Abstract

Over the past decade, some Western countries have begun to re-embrace the language of rehabilitation and calls for penal moderation. Risk logics-which undergirded the rise of mass incarceration in the U.S.-are now being repurposed to call for decarceration. Yet while risk played a key role in the transformation from modern to post-modern punishment, its development remains poorly understood. This article explores the discourses and practices of risk from the 1970s through to 2014 in one U.S. state (Michigan). The analyses focus on probation, the primary alternative to prison. The results show that risk discourses and practices emerged in the 1970s as a mode of resistance to the prison boom and have been adapted in each subsequent decade to address state governing crises.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Risk; incarceration; new penology; penal state; probation

Year:  2017        PMID: 30220730      PMCID: PMC6136655          DOI: 10.1093/bjc/azx077

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Criminol        ISSN: 0007-0955


  5 in total

1.  Rehabilitation in the Punitive Era: The Gap between Rhetoric and Reality in U.S. Prison Programs.

Authors:  Michelle S Phelps
Journal:  Law Soc Rev       Date:  2011-03

2.  The Paradox of Probation: Community Supervision in the Age of Mass Incarceration.

Authors:  Michelle S Phelps
Journal:  Law Policy       Date:  2013

3.  Can we avoid reductionism in risk reduction?

Authors:  Seth J Prins; Adam Reich
Journal:  Theor Criminol       Date:  2017-05-04

4.  Fracturing the Penal State: State Actors and the Role of Conflict in Penal Change.

Authors:  Ashley Rubin; Michelle S Phelps
Journal:  Theor Criminol       Date:  2017-10-25

5.  Mass probation: Toward a more robust theory of state variation in punishment.

Authors:  Michelle S Phelps
Journal:  Punishm Soc       Date:  2016-05-10
  5 in total

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