Solitary Nation Response: Why Does America Allow Solitary Confinement in Prison
1
The major issue addressed in the documentary Solitary Nation is the role that solitary confinement plays in the incarceration process. Violent inmates are often put in solitary confinement either for punishment or for their own protection. It was a practice that started in the 19th century but was largely abandoned because instead of reforming inmates it made them lose their minds. The practice was re-instituted in the 1980s and the documentary takes a look at the inmates and those running a Maine penitentiary. The documentary notes that prisoners can spend years in segregation or “seg” as they call it—locked away from others for 23 hours a day. One can see from the interviews with these inmates that it is not a form of incarceration that is supportive of mental health. The documentary is meant to raise awareness on this issue and show that the mental health of these inmates is being grievously impaired. The argument of the documentary appears to be that there has to be a better and more humane way to deal with people who are violent in prison. It does not appear that there is any attempt or much attempt at all to address the mental health needs or spiritual needs of those incarcerated in solitary confinement. One can see the mental decline of these individuals. Their aggression is evident right on the surface. The big question, however, is what to do with violent inmates—what form of punishment or process should prisons use to deal with the problem of violence and aggression from prisoners? The documentary shows that something needs to be done, because the approach taken with solitary confinement is not working.
2
The primary groups in the documentary are inmates and incarceration officers. These include individuals like Peter Gibbs (inmate in solitary, violent); Rodney Bouffard (warden of the Maine State Prison); Adam Brulotte (inmate in solitary); Todd Fickett (inmate in solitary, accused of faking insanity and engaging in self-harm so that he can get out of solitary and sent to a different prison); and Officer Deguisto. There is a narrator who narrates the film and explains what is going on with the setting and the various situations being shown. Todd Fickett ends up in the mental health unit and is put on medication; he feels confident that the medication will help him get through the remainder of his time in “seg” even though the “seg” is quite likely partly to blame for his deteriorating mental health. When he is returned to solitary he lasts for just three hours before he begins engaging in self-harm.
The filmmaker appears on camera to discuss with the warden whether solitary is right for these people. There is a director of mental health who appears on camera to discuss some of the problems of the situation. Adam Brulotte who had a breakdown...
Dorothy Lange and Documentary Photography Life is documented daily, whether in newspaper photographs of world events, in feature magazines of faraway places and in photo albums of family snapshots. Essentially, all photography is a documentary of whatever is being photographed for whatever reason. However, traditionally, the mention of documentary photography brings up familiar images from a few twentieth century photographers, such as Ansel Adams, Walker Evans, Roy Stryker, Arthur Rothstein and
During this penultimate period of violence under Rojas, the violence that wracked Colombia assumed a number of different characteristics that included an economic quality as well as a political one with numerous assassinations taking place. These were literally contract killings there were sponsored by opposition forms. There were also horrendous genocidal acts that were carried out by gangs combined with authentic revolutionary fighting in some regions of the country. The fourth
Sentencing in the US versus in Germany and the Netherlands There is one major difference between the sentencing and corrections policies of the US and the sentencing and corrections policies of Germany and the Netherlands. The former bases its policy on the ideas of retribution and incapacitation, whereas the latter base their policies on the ideas of rehabilitation and socialization (Vera Institute of Justice, 2013). This basic philosophical orientation towards the
Rousseau: The Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen This is a paper that argues and proves how Rousseau would have reacted to the Declaration of Rights in the light of the French Revolutionaries. It has 3 sources. The Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen produced by the French Revolutionaries is considered as one of the founding documents of the human rights tradition. This paper argues that the document
(Assefa and Degefa, ND, online at (http://www.hmbasha.net/Starbucks_Ethiopia.htm) Until, very recently there were many upscale coffee drinkers that assumed that the nations that hold a geographic monopoly on the coffee market (as coffee can be grown in a very limited region) were benefiting from the overall growth of the success of coffee as a preferred drink all over the world. They were wrong, nations that sell coffee usually in its raw
Non-Market Strategy Project-Pollution/Politics/Business Globalization has changed the planet in numerous ways, constructive and unconstructive; perhaps the most influential of these changes has been the more explicit and perhaps a far more extreme commoditization of a number of natural resources and basic human demands. Traditionally, it's the limited nature of a specific resource or product that means it is a saleable resource, and this conclusion leads to the decision on its sales
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now