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The environmental psychology of prisons and jails : creating humane spaces in secure settings

Title
The environmental psychology of prisons and jails : creating humane spaces in secure settings / Richard E. Wener.
ISBN
9780521452762 (hardback)
0521452767 (hardback)
Published
Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2012.
Physical Description
xiv, 300 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
Summary
"It is often a curious experience for me to lecture about design and behavior in correctional settings because of the different groups of people with different kinds of expertise who may be in the audience. When I am speaking to Criminal Justice/Corrections professionals some of the concepts I discuss are well known (such as the history of prisons, the direct supervision system of design and management, the nature of prison crowding and isolation) but much of the psychology, especially environmental psychology -- including research methodology, stress, post occupancy evaluation, personal space and territoriality, psychology of crowding -- is not. If I speak to psychologists just the opposite is true, and a meeting of architects presents a different set of competencies entirely. So it is with this book. Some topics will be well-known to corrections people, others to psychologists, and still different ones for designers. The hard part is always in figuring out which elements of familiarity can be assumed and which need deeper background. I hope that parts of this book will be of interest to all of those groups -- as well as others such as policy makers"-- Provided by publisher.
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
August 30, 2012
Series
Cambridge series in environment and behavior.
Cambridge series in environment and behavior
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Section I. Overview: History of Correctional Design, Development, and Implementation of Direct Supervision as an Innovation: 1. Introduction; 2. Historical view; 3. The development of direct supervision as a design and management system; 4. Post-occupancy evaluations of the earliest DS jails; 5. Effectiveness of direct supervision models
Section II. Environment-Behavior Issues in Corrections: 6. Correctional space and behavior: privacy, personal space, and territoriality in institutions; 7. Prison crowding; 8. The psychology of isolation in prison settings; 9. The effects of noise in correctional settings; 10. Windows, light, nature, and color
Section III. A Model and Conclusions: 11. An environmental and contextual model of violence in jails and prisons; 12. Conclusion.
Citation

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