Prisons Are the Hardest Places to Read About Mass Incarceration
If you think a map of the moon might help an inmate escape, you might be a prison censor.

The prison staff carted the books away in late January, removing more than 200 titles from a small library inside the Danville Correctional Center in Illinois.
The library was part of the Education Justice Project (EJP), a college education program for inmates run by the University of Illinois. The prison removed the books without notice; Rebecca Ginsburg, director of the program, says it took weeks to get an answer about why the library had been pillaged. She was eventually told that prison officials had decided the books hadn't gone through the proper review process. Emails obtained through public records requests later revealed that they had been concerned about "racially motivated" materials in the library.
According to Ginsburg, the removal followed months of increased scrutiny that included rejecting books from the proposed curriculum for the upcoming semester. Among the rejected or removed titles: W.E.B. Du Bois's The Souls of Black Folks, the autobiography of Frederick Douglass, and Booker T. Washington's Up From Slavery.
"At one point they actually threatened to throw away the books that they had confiscated, over 200 books," Ginsburg says. "I'm a professor, so to me books are this magical thing, and to talk about throwing books away…it was extraordinary."
The censorship drew national headlines and brought embarrassing attention to the state prison system. The Illinois Department of Corrections says it returned the books in July and has since revised its policies.
"IDOC acknowledges the situation should have been handled differently," the department said in a statement at the time. "As a result, we are hiring a volunteer coordinator, reviewing our publication review policy, and instituting an appeal process for disapproved publications."
The incident at Danville was just one of several stories about prison censorship to make the national news this year, and only a small example of the unmitigated power of prison censors across the country, according to a new report released this week by PEN America.
The report details how U.S. prisons arbitrarily apply book bans in the name of institutional security. Texas, for example, bans The Color Purple but not Mein Kampf. Michelle Alexander's The New Jim Crow was banned in prisons in North Carolina, Florida, Michigan, and New Jersey, although those bans were reversed after they received media attention. A New York prison tried to ban a book of maps of the moon, claiming it presented an escape risk.
The PEN America report concludes that prison book censorship policies across the country "are almost uniformly overbroad, arbitrary, under-examined, under-challenged, and maximally restrictive well past the point of reason."
Other state prison systems have tried to ban donations of used books to inmates, citing flimsy concerns over contraband. And publications that report aggressively on the criminal justice system, such as Reason, are often impounded by prison censors. Prison Legal News, a vital source of legal information for inmates, is completely banned in Florida prisons.
"We see over and over again that it's disproportionately books by or about people of color, books that are critical of the criminal justice system, and books that advocate minority or controversial political or social views," says David Fathi, director of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) national prison project. "This is the kind of content-based and viewpoint-based censorship that is most inimical to First Amendment values."
The result is that the hardest place to read about the U.S. criminal justice system—the subject of bestselling books, a glut of podcasts, and prestige television shows and documentaries—is from inside the U.S. criminal justice system.
For example, earlier this year the Arizona's Department of Corrections (ADOC) banned Paul Butler's Chokehold: Policing Black Men, a nonfiction book about race and policing. The ACLU sent a demand letter arguing the ban violated the First Amendment. The ACLU was preparing to litigate when the ADOC relented and reversed the ban in June.
In April, the ACLU sent a letter to the Chatham County Sheriff in Georgia urging him to rescind a policy that banned almost all books except for the sparse few already on the jail's book cart.
Maryland officials also briefly floated a proposal to severely limit from its prisons. They scrapped the idea after receiving a swift public backlash.
Last year, Pennsylvania and Washington both attempted to ban donations of used books to inmates. All books would have to be purchased through approved vendors, which often offer limited selections at high prices or require inmates to purchase electronic tablets. The prisons cited security concerns over contraband, but news investigations showed there was little actual evidence of smuggling via donated dictionaries.
Nonprofit groups like Books to Prisoners, which sends thousands of volumes a year to inmates who request them, say such policies have been getting more restrictive in recent years.
"Prison book programs have been having to deal with this for years and years and years, and it just seems to be getting worse since the end of 2017," says Michelle Dillon, a board member of Books to Prisoners and a staff member at the Human Rights Defense Center, which has compiled partial or full lists of banned books from 20 state prison systems.
Dillon says Books to Prisoners spends about $70,000 a year sending packages of books to inmates, roughly $45,000 of which goes toward shipping costs. It doesn't have the money or resources to keep track of shifting mailroom policies and book ban lists. (Kansas prisons, for example, banned 7,000 different titles until recently. Florida bans more than 20,000.)
"We just have to cross prisons off the list at some point and redirect our limited money towards those prisons where we can be assured that we'll get in," Dillon says. "It's unfortunate of course for the people who are incarcerated in that state, because I know they want books, and we want to send them books. But oftentimes you just have to send a little note card back to say, 'Hey, we're sorry, but your facility does not allow our program.'"
For inmates, more than 95 percent of whom will be released at some point, books offer more than just a temporary mental escape from confinement.
"Those books tell people who are incarcerated not to give up," Jarrett Adams, a formerly incarcerated civil rights attorney, told PEN America. "I would not be where I am today if it weren't for having been able to read certain books that addressed systemic racism and mass incarceration."
While what goes on behind prison walls may seem like a distant concern for people on the outside, Fathi says it is quite the opposite.
"Prisoners are the canary in the coal mine," Fathi says. "When you look at how the government treats prisoners, you see what unchecked, arbitrary government power looks like. And it's not pretty."
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You don't work your way up the ranks of a correctional facility by being a civil libertarian.
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I’ll show you a map of my moon!
Can't they be searched?
I think the idea is that the paper itself could be contraband, LSD, for example.
There is no 'mass incarceration.' This is a propaganda term, intended to make you stop thinking. It was originated in an effort to account for the fact that such an incredibly high number of black males are in prison. They aren't there because the committed crimes - it's 'mass incarceration's' fault.
The city of Boston alone has 1367 unsolved murders going back to the 1960s to deal with. And there are too many people in prison?
Do you expect the Irish police in Boston to figure out who keeps vandalizing that English professor's home?
What is a false dichotomy?
Who needs three questions?
Speaking of throwing away books considered inappropriate for institutionalized persons:
"This week, dumpsters were filled with books that should have left decades ago @TWPSchools and replaced with engaging, relevant, culturally diverse literature."
https://www.theamericanconservative.com/dreher/trashing-unwoke-books-washington-township-nj-equity-learning/
"W.E.B. Du Bois's The Souls of Black Folks"
It's "Folk," singular, you folker.
The report details how U.S. prisons arbitrarily apply book bans in the name of institutional security.
When my deportation flight landed in Newark, NJ, USA, the FBI agents who arrested me cited security concerns as a reason to demand that I remove my kippah. And people wonder why the Jewish president of Ukraine might feel safer if the former mayor of NYC has a hand in the investigation of that Biden who is a few degrees removed from that former president who had installed Arafat as the head of a puppet government in Ramalla.
Have you seen the former president of Tunisia lately? He looks like a Whitewater investor.
🙂
I can imagine a couple of reasons: (1) you can hide information very easily inside lunar maps, or (2) the prison has a clearly stated "no maps" policy and all such rules have false positives and false negatives. This particular false positive is pretty harmless, wouldn't you say?
The alternative explanation is that prisoners will soon be sent to a penal colony on the dark side of the moon, where we'll be glad they don't have escape maps.
Occam's razor, dude.
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Not at all?
Yes, because those are the only people in prison.
Oh no! Rapists and murderers might have a limited selection of reading material!
Yes, you understand that Florida prevents murderers and sex criminals from voting. Did you know that "sex criminal" often means the 14 year old who sends a dick pic to his girlfriend?
Does it feel good controlling the dicks of your 14 year old neighbors via the government?
Do you feel that raw government power flowing through you as you read my reply like the feds do?
Who needs four questions?
Humor is a fine line between not going far enough and going too far. Guess which side of the line this joke falls on?
Speaking of Twitter and the government v. the 1st Amendment, something is happening in Egypt.
That reminds me, the woman in Hong Kong has a point regarding the importance of safety and how universities, as places dedicated to the free flow of ideas or the spreading of government stories, are the best places to vandalize. However, there is only so much risk one can expect the men to assume in the name of safety and morality.