Review: Is Prison for Rehabilitation or Punishment?
High recidivism rates are not surprising when life in prison features the same factors that drive crime.

The standard answer to the question posed by the title of Bill Keller's new book, What's Prison For?, cites four goals: punishment, deterrence, incapacitation, and rehabilitation. But as Keller shows, that last goal is typically treated as an afterthought in the United States.
Given that 95 percent of prisoners will eventually be released, Keller argues, policy makers should pay more attention to whether what happens behind bars increases or decreases former inmates' chances of leading peaceful, productive lives when they get out.
In 2014, after spending nearly four decades at The New York Times, Keller became the founding editor in chief of The Marshall Project, a journalistic outlet focused on criminal justice. His book draws heavily on his colleagues' work, along with his own research and interviews, to make the case that governments routinely squander the opportunity to improve the prospects of people they view as dangerous enough to lock up for years or decades.
The case for a stronger emphasis on rehabilitation rests on practical as well as humanitarian concerns. High recidivism rates are not surprising when life in prison features the same factors that drive crime: social isolation, pervasive powerlessness, and economic distress. The alternatives Keller considers include meaningful educational opportunities, "restorative justice" programs that aim to foster empathy and responsibility, and amenities that afford more dignity and privacy than U.S. prisons generally allow.
Such options, which often involve spending more taxpayer money, may seem like a hard sell for budget-conscious, law-and-order politicians. But a proper analysis has to take into account the current system's enormous social and economic costs, including the preventable crimes that occur when rehabilitation gets short shrift.
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Prison is to protect society from those who are unable or unwilling to follow the rules of a civilized society. Of course, as rules multiply exponentially. the likelihood of any one of them being an unacceptable burden to people increases exponentially as well. Keep it simple, stupid. Most legitimate laws boil down to one simple rule - keep your hands to yourself. You mess with other people, either through force or fraud, you need to be locked away from society. I realize this will automatically condemn most all politicians to life imprisonment, but that's a price I'm willing to pay.
Yeah, Protection, Punishment, or Rehabilitation. The biased false dichotomy makes it sound like choosing to hurt or help convicts, which appeals to the virtuous/self-righteous nature in most everyone, when it's primary purpose has nothing to do with hurting or helping convicts and is, in no way, virtuous or righteous and shouldn't be viewed as such. A prison system that was overwhelmingly effective at rehabilitation and taking every derelict teen and crazed hobo and converting him into a flag-saluting, tax-paying, functional, upright citizen and, by its virtue, does it endlessly is not a function of government consistent with libertarian aims. Reeducation camps are a critical feature of the rehabilitative police state.
I wasn't "first," you two were. Protection is the big one, how did it not even make the article?
Except that vast majority of laws aren't about protecting people from force or fraud, they're about showing fealty to the government by giving up your moral sense and replacing it with the law. It's not about leaving others alone; it's about doing what you are told.
Why would that matter when talking about prison populations? The "vast majority of laws" isn't relevant, what maters is which laws people are in prison for violating.
And of the 1,042,000 people in state prisons as of early 2022, the majority -- 606,000 -- were in them for violent offenses, and another 159,000 are in for property crimes. So, the vast majority (73%) of the prison population is incarcerated for violence or stealing.
For all the talk of drug offenses you get on libertarian fora, the number of people in state prisons for drug offenses (146,000) is less than the number in state prisons for actually killing people (155,000; murder 139,000, manslaughter 16,000).
Well said...
The Governments ONLY job is to ensure Individual Liberty and Justice for all because those are the ONLY things GUNS can create. When they are used to STEAL other things; they become criminal.
This. The system we have now is a replacement of penal colonies. While penal colonies and exile existed to protect law abiding citizens from bad actors, the survival life of penal colonies and wilderness exile served to rehabilitate and/or punish on their own. Those with the ability to rehabilitate gained first hand experience in why civilization and its rules exist.
But those were second order effects of the primary and that was to remove anti-social pariahs from the civilization structure in order to protect it.
We Koch / Reason libertarians are deeply skeptical of prisons. After all, our priority is to make our benefactor Charles Koch richer by expanding his supply of cost-effective labor. And people obviously can't get low-paying jobs with Koch Industries if they're wasting their prime working years behind bars.
That's why we promote the Koch / Soros / Reason soft-on-crime #FreeTheCriminals and #EmptyThePrisons agenda. Under this framework virtually no crime would be punished with a sentence longer than 2 months. (Of course there are exceptions for the most serious crimes, like participating in the HEAVILY ARMED INSURRECTION on 1 / 6, which deserves a life sentence.)
#CheapLaborAboveAll
This narrative is slightly askew. The prisons don't exactly provide cheap labor. The problem is that Charles Koch can't make money rebuilding new institutions while the old ones are still standing.
That said, why pay black and brown people to tear down the statues of Columbus and Teddy Roosevelt when you can get them to do it for free?
Is Prison for Rehabilitation or Punishment?
Neither. It's a jobs program for government unions ranging from police to prison guards.
And the source of profit for the private prison industry.
Private prisons have no power other than what the government gives them. That's like blaming a company for a monopoly created by government regulations.
+10000000000000
"Is Prison for Rehabilitation or Punishment?"
Neither. The purpose of prison is to protect society by exiling criminals there.
If there were any known-effective methods of rehabilitation, this would be a policy discussion worth having.
Since all the proposed rehabilitation methods have as much actual evidence for their efficacy as homeopathy does, anyone proposing changing the system's emphasis to rehabilitation should be mocked, humiliated, and dismissed to the same degree we'd mock someone suggesting we adopt homeopathic medicine as the standard front-line treatment in emergency rooms.
All of the above.
Protect us.
Punish them until they’re rehabilitated.
If that doesn’t work bring back the death penalty.