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63 Prison J. 1 (1983)

handle is hein.journals/prsjrnl63 and id is 1 raw text is: 



                        Editorial

    This issue of The Prison Journal on Prison Violence has been
planned over a period of years. It has turned out to be one of the longest
issues ever in terms of the number of pages, and we expect it may rank as
one of the most provocative issues we have published. The contents
range from analyses of prisons and various forms and causes of violence
to the philosophies in correctional thought, and finally to a look into
the future of corrections in an attempt to assess their social value to the
community,  the nation, and to the world. We have been fortunate in
assembling among  the writers some of the finest minds in corrections
today.
    One of the themes that emerge from the essays in this issue revolves
around  the axiom which  is becoming more  and more  apparent to
psychologists and social observers: violence begets violence. The whip
is not the answer to incorrigibility; rejection is not the answer to
delinquency; abused children become child abusers. And yet in the
course of administering a prison, it is not always apparent that the
axiom  is accepted; it is not clear that the lesson has been learned. We
continue to act as if our measures of control and oppression are a defense
rather than a cause of the violence we fear and sometimes experience in
our institutions.
    There are many  forms of violence. We recall Gandhi's statement
that poverty is the worst form of violence. I remember hearing Robert
Kennedy, speaking at a memorial on the day after Martin Luther King's
assassination, say that social ills and racism constituted the most raw
kind of violence. And in this issue, Paul Keve speaks of the violence
fostered by the prison itself in those inmates who have not been
particularly violence-prone on the outside. Thus, he says, we sustain
the correctional quicksand  . . . and  the prison's criminogenic
character.
    If this issue of The Prison Journal can somehow persuade the
correctional world that our developing understanding of violence and
its causes has deep implications for how we should run our prisons,
then we will have done what we set out to do.



                                                  RA.D.


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