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115 Nw. U. L. Rev. 159 (2020-2021)
Mass Solitary and Mass Incarceration: Explaining the Dramatic Rise in Prolonged Solitary in America's Prisons

handle is hein.journals/illlr115 and id is 165 raw text is: Copyright 2020 by Jules Lobel                           Printed in U.SA
Vol. 115, No. 1
MASS SOLITARY AND MASS INCARCERATION:
EXPLAINING THE DRAMATIC RISE IN
PROLONGED SOLITARY IN AMERICA'S
PRISONS
Jules Lobel
ABSTRACT-In the last two decades of the twentieth century, prisons
throughout the United States witnessed a dramatic rise in the use of solitary
confinement, and the practice continues to be widespread. From the latter
part of the nineteenth century until the 1970s and '80s, prolonged solitary
confinement in the United States had fallen into disuse, as numerous
observers and the United States Supreme Court recognized that the practice
caused profound mental harm to prisoners. The reasons for this dramatic rise
in the nationwide use of solitary confinement and the development of new
supermax prisons have not been explored in depth. In particular, there has
been little critical discussion of the rise of mass prolonged solitary as a
product of the mass incarceration of the last several decades of the twentieth
century.
This Essay locates the rise of mass solitary in the 1980s in the context
of mass incarceration. It explains the dramatic expansion of the use of
solitary confinement and the construction of new super-maximum
(supermax) prisons as an attempt by prison officials and politicians to
maintain control of prisons in the face of increasingly radicalized, rebellious
prisoners-often, but not exclusively, African-American-who had
organized protests and disobedient conduct in American prisons from the
1960s to the 1980s. The rise of solitary was connected to the use of mass
incarceration as a form of social control. As society became more violent, so
too did many prisons, but to view that violence as the underlying cause of
the growth of supermax and other segregated confinement obscures the
deeper, underlying causes of the rise of mass solitary. Those causes are
linked to the rise of mass incarceration itself. Uncovering the history and
causes of the dramatic rise in supermax prisons and the use of prolonged
solitary confinement in the 1980s and '90s is critical to understanding not
only how we got to where we are, but how we can end this cruel and
inhumane practice.
The first Part of this Essay recounts the origins of the supermax prison
at Marion Federal Penitentiary in the late 1970s and early 1980s and

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