Webmiller writes about the aftereffects of mass incarceration in his new book, halfway home.

Webthoughts of reflection and drowning images of a life long lived behind bars are fighting against my willingness to wake up.

Webamerican prison is the remarkable story of a journalist who spent four months working as a corrections officer — and a horrifying exposé of how prisoners are.

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Weblife in america’s prisons is dismal, and the brunt of these dismal conditions falls overwhelmingly on people of color and those who are socially and economically.

Many of america’s inmates do not have family who can send them money to buy items off the prison commissary, like coffee, food, and.

But with proper safeguards prisoner studies may hold the key to the accurate representation of.

Out of the many places on the planet,.

Npr's ailsa chang speaks with.

Webhistory is rife with unethical experiments on inmates.

Webspecifically, this report explores laws and policies that exacerbate socioeconomic inequalities by 1) imposing financial burdens and collateral.

Webto understand how the prison economy works in what we call “the box,” you have to know how the shu is laid out.

Webcash rules everything — even inside prison.

The book is based on 15 years of research in which he followed the lives.

Webmore than 63 percent of people in state prisons are locked up over 100 miles from their families, a 2015 report from the prison policy initiative found.

Webso reporters who have themselves been incarcerated can offer an important perspective when covering the prison system.

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