Burning Down the House: The End of Juvenile Prison

When teenagers scuffle during a basketball game, they are typically benched. But when Will got into it on the court, he and his rival were sprayed in the face at close range by a chemical similar to Mace, denied a shower for twenty-four hours, and then locked in solitary confinement for a month.

One in three American children will be arrested by the time they are twenty-three, and many will spend time locked inside horrific detention centers that defy everything we know about how to rehabilitate young offenders. In a clear-eyed indictment of the juvenile justice system run amok, award-winning journalist Nell Bernstein shows that there is no right way to lock up a child. The very act of isolation denies delinquent children the thing that is most essential to their growth and rehabilitation: positive relationships with caring adults.

Bernstein introduces us to youth across the nation who have suffered violence and psychological torture at the hands of the state. She presents these youths all as fully realized people, not victims. As they describe in their own voices their fight to maintain their humanity and protect their individuality in environments that would deny both, these young people offer a hopeful alternative to the doomed effort to reform a system that should only be dismantled.

Burning Down the House is a clarion call to shut down our nation’s brutal and counterproductive juvenile prisons and bring our children home.

1117341894
Burning Down the House: The End of Juvenile Prison

When teenagers scuffle during a basketball game, they are typically benched. But when Will got into it on the court, he and his rival were sprayed in the face at close range by a chemical similar to Mace, denied a shower for twenty-four hours, and then locked in solitary confinement for a month.

One in three American children will be arrested by the time they are twenty-three, and many will spend time locked inside horrific detention centers that defy everything we know about how to rehabilitate young offenders. In a clear-eyed indictment of the juvenile justice system run amok, award-winning journalist Nell Bernstein shows that there is no right way to lock up a child. The very act of isolation denies delinquent children the thing that is most essential to their growth and rehabilitation: positive relationships with caring adults.

Bernstein introduces us to youth across the nation who have suffered violence and psychological torture at the hands of the state. She presents these youths all as fully realized people, not victims. As they describe in their own voices their fight to maintain their humanity and protect their individuality in environments that would deny both, these young people offer a hopeful alternative to the doomed effort to reform a system that should only be dismantled.

Burning Down the House is a clarion call to shut down our nation’s brutal and counterproductive juvenile prisons and bring our children home.

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Burning Down the House: The End of Juvenile Prison

Burning Down the House: The End of Juvenile Prison

by Nell Bernstein
Burning Down the House: The End of Juvenile Prison

Burning Down the House: The End of Juvenile Prison

by Nell Bernstein

Hardcover

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Overview


When teenagers scuffle during a basketball game, they are typically benched. But when Will got into it on the court, he and his rival were sprayed in the face at close range by a chemical similar to Mace, denied a shower for twenty-four hours, and then locked in solitary confinement for a month.

One in three American children will be arrested by the time they are twenty-three, and many will spend time locked inside horrific detention centers that defy everything we know about how to rehabilitate young offenders. In a clear-eyed indictment of the juvenile justice system run amok, award-winning journalist Nell Bernstein shows that there is no right way to lock up a child. The very act of isolation denies delinquent children the thing that is most essential to their growth and rehabilitation: positive relationships with caring adults.

Bernstein introduces us to youth across the nation who have suffered violence and psychological torture at the hands of the state. She presents these youths all as fully realized people, not victims. As they describe in their own voices their fight to maintain their humanity and protect their individuality in environments that would deny both, these young people offer a hopeful alternative to the doomed effort to reform a system that should only be dismantled.

Burning Down the House is a clarion call to shut down our nation’s brutal and counterproductive juvenile prisons and bring our children home.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781595589569
Publisher: New Press, The
Publication date: 06/03/2014
Pages: 384
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.30(d)
Lexile: 1280L (what's this?)

About the Author

Nell Bernstein is a former Soros Justice Media Fellow, a winner of a White House Champion of Change award, and the author of All Alone in the World. Her articles have appeared in Newsday, Salon, Mother Jones, and the Washington Post, among other publications. She lives outside Berkeley, California.

Table of Contents

Author's Note xiii

Prelude: The Time Is at Hand 1

Introduction 5

Part I Teenage Wasteland

1 Inside Juvenile Prison 21

2 Birth of an Abomination: The Juvenile Prison in the Nineteenth Century 38

3 Other People's Children 52

4 The Rise of the Super-Predator and the Decline of the Rehabilitative Ideal 71

5 The Fist and the Boot: Physical Abuse in Juvenile Prisons 81

6 An Open Secret: Sexual Abuse Behind Bars 103

7 The Hole: Solitary Confinement of Juveniles 129

8 "Hurt People Hurt People": Trauma and Incarceration 151

9 The Things They Carry: Juvenile Reentry 181

Part II Burning Down the House

10 A New Wave of Reform 201

11 A Better Mousetrap: The Therapeutic Prison 224

12 Only Connect: Rehabilitation Happens in the Context of Relationship 254

13 Connection in Action: Transforming Juvenile Justice 274

14 The Real Recidivism Problem: One Hundred Years of Reform and Relapse at the Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys 290

15 Against Reform: Beyond the Juvenile Prison 307

Acknowledgments 321

Notes 325

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