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7 J. Contemp. Crim. Just. iii (1991)

handle is hein.journals/jccj7 and id is 1 raw text is: 




                     Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice  iii
                                   Vol. 7 * No. 1 * March 1991



EDITORIAL COMMENT


    It has now been a decade and a half since the Weaversville Intensive
Treatment Unit opened in Pennsylvania. This facility is regarded by many
as the first for-profit correctional institution in the modem correctional
privatization movement. Since then a variety of different kinds of facilities
have opened  under private control and operation. The Immigration and
Naturalization Service opened a number of institutions under private con-
tract in the early 1980s, beginning with the Pasadena Immigration Holding
facility in 1980. In 1984 Hamilton County, Tennessee contracted with the
Corrections Corporationof Americato assume responsibility for the Silverdale
Detention Center, an adult work farm housing a wide range of offenders and
pre-trial detainees. In 1988 the same company was awarded a contract to
finance, construct and manage  the New  Mexico  Women's   Correctional
facility.
    Thus  the number  and  diversity of institutions created, owned, and
operated by private companies has grown dramatically during the last half of
the 1980s. Companies  such as Behavioral Systems Southwest, Wackenhut,
Corrections Corporation of America, Pricor, Buckingham  Security, U. S.
Corrections Corporation and  a number of other firms have successfully
sought contracts to operate adult and juvenile detention facilities, county
jails, youth camps, federal immigration holding centers, state prisons, and
pre-parole facilities. Although only a small fraction of inmates held in these
kinds of institutions are in privately operated facilities, the number of such
facilities is growing rapidly.
     Debate over the propriety of private sector involvement in the financing,
construction, and management of private prisons has been spirited and wide
ranging. The professional literature now contains scores of articles discuss-
ing philosophic and moral predicates, cost-efficiency, service quality, insti-
tutional flexibility, and legal issues such as liability. Articles have appeared
providing historical comparisons with the nineteenth-century privatization
movement,   simulating lawsuits against private firms under existing state
law, and providing empirical evidence on the impact of private involvement
in corrections.
     This special issue on correctional privatization attempts to contribute to
the ongoing  discussion of the role of the private sector in the America
correctional system. It begins with Linda Calvert Hanson's overview of
legislative and government agency activity during the 1980s. She chronicles
recent developments and provides valuable information on the current state
of privatization-related legislation and legal opinion. Her survey suggests
that the states have been making significant efforts to modify their laws to
facilitate development of private sector involvement in corrections.

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