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20 Crime & Delinquency 1 (1974)

handle is hein.journals/cadq20 and id is 1 raw text is: 





Crime and



Delinquency

     * National   Council  on  Crime  and   Delinquency 0

Volume  20                  January 1974                  Number  I




              Peaceful Settlement

                of Prison Conflict

                       A Policy  Statement
   BOARD OF DIRECTORS, NATIONAL COUNCIL ON CRIME AND DELINQUENCY


L  IFE IN PRISON is antithetical to the
    principles of individual responsi-
bility and freedom of choice in a
free society. Under the circumstances,
conflict between prisoners and the
employees and environment of a cor-
rectional institution would seem to be
an inherent consequence of imprison-
ment. When  worsening conditions of
incarceration and rising expectations
of prison reform are added, the result
is conflict, which often escalates into
a riot ending in injury and death.
  Settlement through violence has
usually hastened reform of the more
obvious abuses, but at a terrible price.
Tragedies such as Attica have shocked
the nation into the realization that
alternative solutions must be found
and orderly procedures for the han-
dling of inmate grievances must be
developed.

                                 1


  Prisons that may appear on the sur-
face to be untroubled often obscure
human  tragedies of even greater di-
mensions than those which are exposed
by riots.
  For these reasons and to reduce the
use of institutions for other than dan-
gerous offenders, NCCD has called for
a halt to the construction of prisons
in favor of implementing noninstitu-
tional alternatives.'
  The  feasibility of settling prison
conflict peaceably by arbitration, medi-
ation, and negotiation is supported by
experience in the nonviolent resolu-
tion of disputes between labor and
management  and between competing
businesses and industrial firms, and by

  1. Institutional Construction-A Policy
Statement (April 25, 1972), Crime and De-
linquency, October 1972, pp. 351-32.

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