Behind bars Surviving prison

Jeffrey Ian Ross

Book - 2002

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Subjects
Published
Indianapolis, IN : Alpha Books [2002]
Language
English
Main Author
Jeffrey Ian Ross (-)
Other Authors
Stephen C. Richards (-)
Physical Description
219 pages ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes index.
ISBN
9780028643519
  • Introduction
  • Part 1. You're Under Arrest
  • 1.. Busted!
  • 2.. Four Fatal Legal Mistakes (and How to Avoid Them)
  • Part 2. You've Got Jail!
  • 3.. Big Houses, Dog Pens, and Gladiator Schools: The U.S. Prison System
  • 4.. Hacks, Cops, and Cons: Who's Who in Prison
  • Part 3. Doing Time
  • 5.. Jugged: Welcome to Prison
  • 6.. Don't Drop the Soap: Sex in the Slammer
  • 7.. My Baloney Has a First Name: Food in Prison
  • 8.. License Plates and GEDs: Work and School in Prison
  • 9.. Blood In, Blood Out: Prison Gangs and Violence
  • 10.. Brother, Can You Spare Some Time: A Day in the Life of Joe Convict
  • 11.. We Ain't No Debutantes: Women Behind Bars
  • Part 4. Beyond the Walls
  • 12.. Happy Days Are Here Again: Getting Out
  • 13.. Revolving Doors: Fixing the Incarceration Machine
  • Appendixes
  • A.. Slammer Slang: A Glossary
  • B.. We Understand, Son: Prison Reform Advocacy Groups
  • Index
Review by Library Journal Review

In the 1960s, peace groups issued leaflets to their members on what to do if arrested during nonviolent demonstrations. Now two criminologists have come up with a guidebook on surviving the criminal justice system that is loosely modeled after these earlier leaflets. The crimes have expanded to include far more weighty ones than civil disobedience. Ross and Richards (coauthors, Convict Criminogy) offer advice on what to do if your front door is bashed in by police in a drug bust and how to avoid fatal legal mistakes. Writing in sections under topical headings, the authors follow an anonymous everyman (or woman) through an arrest, a trial, and an incarceration. The legal system they depict bears no resemblance to the one in school textbooks. It is the enemy. The authors describe different types of prisons and suggest how to deal with the correctional officers, the other inmates, and various types of discipline. Finally, they discuss making parole and returning to life on the outside. An appendix offers a glossary of prison slang and a statement about the status of prisons in America today. Overall, this is an absorbing, original book that should be required reading for criminal justice classes. Ostensibly intended for the person who is caught committing the crime, in reality Behind Bars gives the outsider an in-depth look at what it is like to be in prison in America today. Highly recommended for all libraries.-Frances Sandiford, formerly with Green Haven Correctional Facility Lib., Stormville, NY (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.