Philosophies of Punishment
Models of Justice & Schools of Thought
History of Prisons
Jails & Jail Operations
Vulnerable Populations & Reform
100

This philosophy of punishment focuses on giving offenders what they “deserve.”

What is retribution?

100

This model of justice prioritizes efficiency and controlling crime, sometimes at the expense of individual rights.

What is the crime control model?


100

These early punishments were often physical, public, and brutal.

What are early punishments?

100

This is the main difference between jails and prisons.

What is that jails hold people short-term and prisons hold people long-term?

100

This group is vulnerable because they have not been convicted and may stay in jail solely due to inability to pay bail.

Who are pretrial detainees?

200

This punishment philosophy aims to prevent future crime by making an example of the punishment.

What is deterrence?

200

This justice model emphasizes protecting individual rights and following proper legal procedures.

What is the due process model?

200

These institutions focused on labor and discipline as a form of correction.

What are Bridewells or Houses of Correction?

200

This process includes fingerprinting, photographing, and entering personal information.

What is the booking process?

200

This population is at high risk due to lack of adequate treatment and increased suicide risk.

Who are people with mental illness?

300

This philosophy focuses on protecting society by removing offenders from the community.

What is incapacitation?

300

This school of thought assumes people are rational and commit crime after weighing costs and benefits.

What is the classical school?

300

This prison system emphasized total isolation and silence.

What is the Pennsylvania (Separate) System?

300

People held in jail who have not yet been convicted of a crime fall under this category.

What is pretrial detention?

300

This vulnerable group faces unique health and safety risks while incarcerated.

Who are women, pregnant women, juveniles, and the elderly?

400

This punishment philosophy emphasizes treatment, education, and behavior change.

What is rehabilitation?

400

This school of thought focuses on biological, psychological, and social factors that influence crime.

What is the positivist school?

400

This prison system allowed inmates to work together but required silence.

What is the Auburn (Congregate) System?

400

This social factor strongly contributes to jail overcrowding and pretrial detention.

What is poverty?

400

This jail innovation emphasizes constant staff-inmate interaction and reduced use of force.

What is podular direct supervision?

500

This philosophy focuses on helping offenders successfully return to society after incarceration.

What is reintegration?

500

This school of thought supports individualized punishment based on the offender rather than the offense.

What is the positivist school?

500

This reformatory focused on rehabilitation, education, and indeterminate sentencing.

What is the Elmira Reformatory?

500

These are two ways jails attempt to reduce overcrowding.

What are alternatives like bail reform, diversion programs, or early release?

500

These programs pair police officers with mental health professionals to respond to crises.

What are police–health care co-responder programs?

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