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27 Prison J. 241 (1947)

handle is hein.journals/prsjrnl27 and id is 1 raw text is: 





         IMPRISONMENT FROM THE INSIDE'
                              By
                        BAYARD  RUSTIN'
          Field Secretary Fellowship of Reconciliation

    In May  1946, Caleb Foote, a graduate of Harvard University
and  imprisoned for his conscientious objection to war, wrote a
thought-provoking  article in Fellowship, the magazine  of The
Fellowship of Reconciliation. Of the four freedoms, he wrote,
Perhaps  the greatest public response has been to freedom from
fear. Upon that freedom  the other three depend;  yet if our so-
ciety is ever to achieve that freedom, it must discard  a penal
system that creates fear and  utilizes the threat of insecurity.
    Three  years  earlier Harry  Elmer  Barnes  and  Negley  K.
Teeters had  published their now  classic study, New Horizons
in Crimonology.   In Chapter  26, discussing the Cruelty and
Futility of Modern Prisons, they concluded:
    The  authors of this book are convinced that the makeshifts
    and patch-work  undertaken by prison administrators, worthy
    as much  of it is, offers no adequate solution. Nothing, short
    of a  complete overhauling  of our jurisprudence, including
    the  abolition of penal codes, and  the introduction of  an
    entirely new concept  of treatment of offenders offers much
    promise  in the field of penology.
    In February  1945, Robert M.  Lindner's book, Rebel  With-
Out a Cause,  was published. Dr. Lindner  was  at that time on
the faculty of Bucknell University and on the staff of the United
States Public Health  Service and  Psychologist at the  Federal
Penitentiary in Lewisburg, Pa. It is highly significant that a man
of Dr. Lindner's scientific training and long experience in pri-
sons  should  thus conclude  his  meticulous and  dispassionate
study:
    We   have had  in this volume a striking illustration of the
    truth of William A. White's remark  that behind every crim-
    inal deed lies a secret. But more important, we have glimpsed
    the utter futility, the sheer waste of confining individuals
    in barred and turretted zoos for humans without attempting
    to recover  such secrets . . . Modern prisons, the gleaming
    shops  and factories, the bright young  social workers, the
    custodial hierarchy-in  brief, the whole hollow structure of
    rehabilitation [are] based  upon  expediency, untested  hy-
    potheses, unwarranted   conclusions from a  pseudo-scientific
    empiricism.
  Address delivered at One Hundred Sixtidth Annual Meeting of the Prison Society.
2 Mr. Rustin served 28 months in prison as a conscentious objector to conscription.

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