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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
4 pages in length. Other than her immediate advisors or cabinet members, the Governor should seek advice from two very important sources of tangible input – as opposed to sterile statistics - where criminal activity and correctional facilities are concerned: community police chiefs and prison wardens. Additionally, representatives from such advocate groups as Mothers Against Drunk Drivers (MADD) should be approached for their valuable contribution where the issue of early release is considered. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCReframe.rtf
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community police chiefs and prison wardens. Additionally, representatives from such advocate groups as Mothers Against Drunk Drivers (MADD) should be approached for their valuable contribution where the issue of
early release is considered. These same individuals should be appointed to her task force, as well. The language/metaphors the Governor uses in her presentation to the individuals she asks
to serve on the task force should be persuasive but not overbearing, informative but not uninspired, expressive but not condescending. For example, she will want to compare the penal
problems of Utopia with other states in order to openly evaluate the benefit of her plan. California, where prison officials have "no control over the capacities of their institutions
or over the number of offenders that are sent to them by the courts" (Jerin, no date), has long attempted to achieve the same objectives as Utopias governor is striving
to reach, making it a key state upon which to focus. Privately subsidized prisons have become a popular consideration as a means by
which to offset the exorbitant amounts of money that are required to accommodate the myriad recipients of Californias mandatory minimum law. The operation of prisons by the private sector
became a vital option again during the 1980s and early 1990s for several reasons, the first of which was the existence of a general sociopolitical climate favoring the reduction of
taxes and government size. Second was the implementation of "get-tough" social control policies, particularly the war on drugs, and increasing mandatory prison sentences. These policies resulted in an
unprecedented increase in federal and state prison populations, which rose from 315,974 in 1980 to 883,656 in 1992, a 180% increase (Shichor et al, 1995), a steep augmentation in inmate
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