Prisoners at Urga, shut up for the remainder of their lives in heavy iron-bound coffins.
A Tour in Mongolia
Beatrix Gull London: Methuen & Co., Ltd., 1920.

seen from Argentina
seen from Italy
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from Italy
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from Croatia

seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Russia

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States
Prisoners at Urga, shut up for the remainder of their lives in heavy iron-bound coffins.
A Tour in Mongolia
Beatrix Gull London: Methuen & Co., Ltd., 1920.
Michael Eddington in the brig
This is going to sound like an odd hill to die on and this isn’t even the most annoying thing I’ve seen in Star Trek but--
Why was Eddington in a brig for months after his arrest? We know the prison system was improved by the 23rd century--we saw it in the 24th century at the NZ penal colony where Tom Paris was sentenced. Yet, Eddington is in a small brig for months! Shouldn’t he have been transferred to a facility on Earth pending court martial?
Just something that’s been bugging me ever since I re-watched DS9 this year. The only logical explanation I can come up with is they didn’t want to transport him at a time of war (which does make sense)
I just find it annoying.
Covid-19 is poised to cut a swathe through the region’s cramped, underfunded prisons but neglect and a lack of testing mean the true extent of the crisis may never be known.
All across Asia, and around the world, people have been urged to keep a safe distance and maintain good personal hygiene amid the coronavirus pandemic. But if your “home” is a prison dormitory that holds five times the 100 inmates it was designed to, doing either is almost impossible.Overcrowding is the norm in the prison systems of many developing nations, but the Philippines has long held the dubious distinction of having one of the most jam-packed in the world.
In Manila City Jail, one of an estimated 933 correctional facilities in the country, sweaty bodies lie in cells, toilets, stairways and other poorly ventilated areas, as inmates try to grab some sleep wherever they can. Some even have to take turns.
Poor living conditions – such as the subdivided units or caged homes that impoverished Hongkongers live in, packed migrant workers’ quarters in cities across Southeast Asia and slums with no running water – are traditionally fertile ground for disease transmission.
But with Asia’s largest prison systems plagued by low health care standards and a limited ability to test inmates, experts say any outbreak is likely to be deadlier than in the general population. Already, the suspension of prison visits to prevent the virus from spreading has taken a toll on the mental well-being of inmates.
Field workers and researchers interviewed by This Week in Asia say now is as good a time as ever for the authorities to reduce prison populations and consider initiatives to reform justice systems, while channelling more funds into rehabilitation and health programmes for inmates.
“I actually think things are in dire straits,” said Clarke Jones, criminologist and senior research fellow at the Australian National University. “Prisons and jails [in Southeast Asia] have become so neglected and overcrowded that it will be near impossible to manage if Covid-19 takes a real hold.”
Jones said official records were not transparent and publicly available information on jails was limited.
“There have been many deaths but they are kept secret, not recorded, and [the bodies are] cremated soon after death,” he said. “I don’t think we will ever know the true infection and fatality rates … due to corruption, lack of reporting, and lack of any health care.”
Brett Leigh Dicks. From «Behind These Walls»: photographs of Decommissioned Australian Gaols
[::SemAp Twitter || SemAp::]
Fiona Apple - Pretrial (Let Her Go Home) (Official Music Video)
https://lethergohome.com
TBH prison labor should be illegal IMO. You wanna lock people away instead of solving systematic problems? Fine. You gotta keep them comfortable on your own dime, then, and explain to taxpayers why the system is so bloated and just filling with bodies and there's no actual plan there.
Or, pay them fully for their work and put them back on a path to freedom and employment.
When those on parole or probation are included, one out of every 47 adults is under “some form of correctional supervision.”
Not only have we adopted more criminal laws at an astonishing clip, but the punishments our criminal laws carry have also grown markedly. Beginning in earnest in the second half of the 20th century, legislatures began to adopt laws that had, as Judge Jed Rakoff has noted, "two common characteristics: they imposed higher penalties, and they removed much of judicial dis-cretion in sentencing." Notable among these laws were statutes imposing mandatory minimum terms of imprisonment for certain crimes.
Today, sentencing changes like these can propel some sentences into the stratosphere. A defense attorney in Florida told The Economist that, looking at his clients' prison terms, it appeared to him that the United States was conducting "an experiment in imprisoning first-time non-violent offenders for periods of time previously reserved only for those who had killed someone." One of his clients who had been convicted of fraud was sentenced to 845 years. "I got it reduced to 835," the lawyer said with a sigh. A group that looked across state prison systems found "a consistent upward trend in the amount of time people spend in state prisons" and that the "longest prison terms are getting longer." Another group found that one out of every seven of those now incarcerated is serving a life sentence—more people in total than were serving anysentence in 1970. And while crime tends to be a "young man's game," 30 percent of those serving life sentences were found to be over the age of 55.
The Prison Hulk 'Success' in Drycock 1923.
In December 1851 there were only 29 people in prison in Victoria. Two years later there were 955. The Victorian gold rush lured to Victoria ex-convicts and escapees from New South Wales and Van Diemen's Land who re-offended and were sent to prison. The prisons soon became overcrowded, the Victorian government decided to use prison hulks. In 1852 it purchased the ship ‘President’ and had it fitted out as a floating prison. But the prison population continued to rise, so the following year the government purchased the ‘Deborah’, the ‘Success’ and the ‘Sacramento’ for conversion into prison ships, followed by the ‘Lysander’ in 1854. The ships had their masts removed and were anchored off Williamstown on Hobson's Bay. They held the worst offenders in the penal system.
The hulks were intended to be a ‘terror to evil-doers', so conditions were extremely harsh. Prisoners were kept in irons below decks, in cramped conditions with no work and no books. For minor offences they were sent to solitary confinement in dark cells below the waterline.
In 1853, John Price was appointed as the Inspector General of Penal Establishments. The Age described him as ‘a man whose leading characteristics appear to be cunning and cruelty’. The conditions on the hulks became even worse under his authoritarian rule - Price took a personal interest in inflicting additional punishment on prisoners. They were put in irons for their entire sentence, and violence and cruel punishments were condoned.
In March 1857, Price went to Williamstown to hear the grievances of the prisoners on the hulks. One prisoner threw clods of earth at him, others threw heavy stones. He was then kicked, beaten and struck with picks and shovels. He died the following day.
In 1885 the Victorian government ordered that the five prison hulks be broken up. The ‘Deborah’ and ‘Sacramento’ were gradually dismantled. The ‘Success’ survived until 1945, after touring the world as ‘the famous Australian convict ship. - Info from: Lynn, P & Armstrong, G 1996, From Pentonville to Pentridge.
Source: Tony Beyer