Reviews
Damn it's compelling... If you're interested in the historical roots of our prison system, you ought to spend an evening with this book.
Archival shelves laden with criminal justice records await informed examination. Historian Spillane found a pertinent data set and analyzed it, brilliantly so.
Should be required reading for historians of juvenile and criminal corrections... Presents a compelling cautionary tale that contemporary would-be reformers ignore at their peril, while offering important new insights for scholars.
Even-handed and free of jargon, Joseph F. Spillane's Coxsackie takes readers inside the prison and brings them face to face with prison life. The result is a revealing account of how our criminal justice system operates on the ground level. Spillane demonstrates in a compelling way how the realities of prison life often defeat the reform efforts that politicians impose on our correctional system.
Book Details
Preface
Introduction: The Ashes of Reform
Part I: The Rapid Rise of Prison Reform in New York, 1929–1944
1. The Reformer's Mural: The Liberal Penal Imagination
2. A New Deal for Prisons: The Politics of
Preface
Introduction: The Ashes of Reform
Part I: The Rapid Rise of Prison Reform in New York, 1929–1944
1. The Reformer's Mural: The Liberal Penal Imagination
2. A New Deal for Prisons: The Politics of Reform in New York
Part II: Prison Lives and the World of the Reformatory
3. Adolescents Adrift: Young Men on the Road to Coxsackie
4. Against the Wall: Survival and Resistance at Coxsackie
5. Reform at Work: Ideas into Action at Coxsackie
6. A Conspiracy of Frustration: Coming Home
Part III: The Slow Death of Prison Reform in New York 1944–1977
7. The Frying Pan and the Fire: The Reformatory in Crisis, 1944–1963
8. Out of Time: Coxsackie and the End of the Reform Idea
9. Floodtide: Coxsackie and Post-Reformatory Prison Politics, 1963–1977
Conclusion: The Ghost of Prisons Future
Notes
Essay on Sources
Index