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Chapter 7 Flashcards
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building tenders
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inmates who were tacitly acknowledged by prison administrators to have informal social control of a given inmate area
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close-custody unit
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a form of administrative segregation
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con-politicians
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inmates with money and influence who through skill and manipulation obtain goods or services
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cultural importation hypothesis
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inmates enter prison with a variety of values and experiences that may contradict the values in prison
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deprivation hypothesis
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a major function of the inmate subculture’s normative system is to prevent the internalization of social rejection and its conversion into self-rejection
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doing time
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inmates who view the prison experience as a short break in their criminal career
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drug offenses
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clearly played a primary role in the overall growth of the prison population during the period from 2000 to 2010
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fish
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inmates new to prison life
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frustration riots
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during the 1940s and 1950s, dozens of prisons in the nation experienced these types of riots between a unified inmate subculture and prison authorities
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gleaning
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inmates who adapt to prison life by getting as much out of prison as possible through programs and self-improvement
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imprisonment binge
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due to increased incarceration levels, crowding, and new construction
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inmate code
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attitudinal and behavioral norms of prison subculture
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jailing
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inmates who adapts to prison life by not thinking of the world outside as home
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legitimate inmate economy
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the facility’s store, commissary, or canteen
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outlaws
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inmates who rely on force and physical violence to obtain what they want from other inmates
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pains of imprisonment
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term used to describe the inmate’s emotional reaction to the loss of: liberty, goods and services, heterosexual relationships, autonomy, freedom of movement, and security
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political riot
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riot where inmates make demands submitted to prison officials
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prison gangs
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not a part of the traditional prison culture they are cliques and informal groups organized principally or even exclusively on racial or ethnic lines
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prison riot
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a group attempt by inmates to take over part or all of the prison
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prison subculture
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the negative, animosity directed equally at the prison staff and at free society
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prisonization
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the mechanism by which one becomes a member of that subculture – the process through which prison inmates adapt the general culture of the penitentiary
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psychological victimization
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the threat of physical harm
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punks
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inmates who passively participate in homosexuality in prison or jail
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race riots
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apolitical racial conflict was a crucial factor in these types riots
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rage riots
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often spontaneous, an expression of real or perceived inmate frustration with mistreatment
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right guys
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those rare inmates who follow all of the precepts of the code; the most prisonized of all prison or jail residents
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security threat groups
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prison gangs are found in 40 state prison systems, the District of Columbia and in the US Bureau of Prisons
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solidary opposition
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the inmate’s collective response to the pains of imprisonment
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Square Johns
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inmates who follow the prison’s official rules, take part in institutional programming, and generally ignore all but the snitching provision of the inmate code
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sub rosa inmate economy
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an underground marketplace that exists outside the legitimate inmate economy
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unit management
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the belief that providing treatment such as psychological or educational assistance to create small, semi-autonomous self-contained institutions of approximately 50 to 100 inmates to break up existing ties based on race, ethnicity or gangs makes individuals less likely to engage in future crimes
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wolves
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the aggressor of sex in prisons or jails who does not view themselves as homosexual
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