Received an Honorable Mention for the 2015 Society for Social Work and Research Outstanding Social Work Book Award
To date, knowledge of the everyday world of the juvenile correction institution has been extremely sparse. Compassionate Confinement brings to light the challenges and complexities inherent in the U.S. system of juvenile corrections. Building on over a year of field work at a boys’ residential facility, Laura S. Abrams and Ben Anderson-Nathe provide a context for contemporary institutions and highlight some of the system’s most troubling tensions.
This ethnographic text utilizes narratives, observations, and case examples to illustrate the strain between treatment and correctional paradigms and the mixed messages regarding gender identity and masculinity that the youths are expected to navigate. Within this context, the authors use the boys’ stories to show various and unexpected pathways toward behavior change. While some residents clearly seized opportunities for self-transformation, others manipulated their way toward release, and faced substantial challenges when they returned home. Compassionate Confinement concludes with recommendations for rehabilitating this notoriously troubled system in light of the experiences of its most vulnerable stakeholders.
Sort of finished this book so that I could reference it in a Phd application (one of my professors wrote it) but it was very illuminating. I finished Michael Foucault's Discipline and Punishment and a number of themes that he brought up in that seminal analysis and the similarities between military service, the construction of modern education systems and prison systems still rings true. This book was a confirmation that much of the heightened rhetoric surrounding juvenile crime is overblown and that the basis for draconian policies like "zero tolerance" ones have no basis in practical or statistical reality. I will likely be referencing this book for the foreseeable future.