- Newly Added Audiobooks
- Most Popular Audiobooks
- Try Something Different
- Always Available Audio
- Popular Audio
- Audiobooks Under 3 Hours
- Family Reads: Audiobooks for the Whole Family
- The Case of the Checked Out Mystery
- Great Narrators
- There Can Only be One: Stand-Alone Mystery and Thriller Novels
- Poetry: Meant to be Spoken
- See all
-
Description
-
Details
A recent study by the Urban Institute estimates that one-third of all counties in the United States house a prison, and that our prison and jail population is now over 2.1 million. Another report indicates that more than 97 percent of all U.S. prisoners are eventually released, and communities are absorbing nearly 650,000 formerly incarcerated individuals each year. These figures are particularly alarming considering the fact that rural communities are using prisons as economic development vehicles without fully understanding the effects of these jails on the area.
This book is the result of author Eric J. Williams' ground-level research about the effects of prisons upon two rural American communities that lobbied to host maximum security prisons. Through hundreds of interviews conducted while living in Florence, Colorado, and Beeville, Texas, Williams offers the perspective of local residents on all sides of the issue, as well as a social history told mainly from the standpoint of those who lobbied for the prisons.
Kindle Book
- Release date: March 3, 2011
OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780313383663
- Release date: March 3, 2011
PDF ebook
- ISBN: 9780313383663
- File size: 1041 KB
- Release date: March 3, 2011