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Indian Prisons: Towards Reformation, Rehabilition and Resocialization

by K. Jaishankar , Tumpa Mukherjee , Priti Bharadwaj
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Current price ₹697.00
Original price ₹995.00
Original price ₹995.00
Original price ₹995.00
(-30%)
₹697.00
Current price ₹697.00

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Book cover type: Hardcover
  • ISBN13: 9788126919505
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • Subject: Law and Criminology
  • Publisher: Atlantic Publishers & Distributors (P) Ltd
  • Publisher Imprint: Atlantic
  • Publication Date:
  • Pages: 328
  • Original Price: INR 995.0
  • Language: English
  • Edition: N/A
  • Item Weight: 420 grams
  • BISAC Subject(s): Penology

Many of India’s prisons date back to the era of British colonial rule, where prisoners are kept in crumbling facilities largely unchanged since the beginning of the previous century. There is an urgent need for reforms as the practice of punishment and public opinion concerning it has been changing due to the rapidly transforming social values and sentiments of the people. Thus, punishment can be used as a method of reducing the incidence of criminal behaviour, either by deterring the potential offenders, or by reforming them into law-abiding citizens. The objective of punishment can only be achieved by the prison institution. Indian Prisons: Towards Reformation, Rehabilitation and Resocialization is an anthology of essays written by established and young academics from the field of social sciences, viz. history, law, political science, criminology, and sociology. The book tries to address the current contemporary debates in the field of Correctional Administration and Management in India. Considering the various issues of prisons, including reformation, rehabilitation and resocialization processes, this book emerges as a capsule which provides an overview of current prison practices and gives an in-depth understanding of prison systems in India with solutions to problems plaguing Indian prisons. It will be useful for individuals, research institutes and training centres engaged in the field of penology, corrections, and prison administration.

K. Jaishankar is a Senior Assistant Professor in the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Manonmaniam Sundaranar University, Tirunelveli, Tamil Nadu, India. He was awarded the National Academy of Sciences India (NASI)—SCOPUS Young Scientist Award, 2012 in Social Sciences. He was a Commonwealth Fellow (2009-2010) at the Centre for Criminal Justice Studies, School of Law, University of Leeds, UK. URL: http://www.drjaishankar.co.nr Tumpa Mukherjee is Assistant Professor in Sociology, Women's Christian College, Kolkata, India. She holds MA and PhD degrees in Sociology from University of Calcutta and Jadavpur University, Kolkata. She specializes in policing studies. Her book Community Policing in India: A Sociological Perspective was published in the year 2006. Priti Bharadwaj is an independent researcher specializing in prisoners’ rights and prison reforms. She has an undergraduate degree with a double major in Criminology and Computing Science from Simon Fraser University, Canada. She worked as a Consultant for the Prison Reforms Programme in Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative (CHRI), an international nonprofit organization headquartered in New Delhi, India. Currently, she is pursuing a Masters in Nonprofit Administration from the University of San Francisco. Megha Desai Asher holds an Under Graduate Degree in Criminology and Criminal Justice System, and a Post Graduate Degree in Journalism and Mass Communication from Griffith University, Australia. She is presently based in India as a freelance journalist contributing to The Times of India. She has also freelanced with India’s leading women’s magazine, Femina.

  • Foreword
  • Introduction
  • Section One: Indian Corrections: Critical Appraisals

  • 1. Foucault’s Prison Principles and the Colonial Indian Prison System
  • Pradip Basu
  • 2. Indian Prisons: A Critique
  • Megha Desai Asher and Tumpa Mukherjee
  • 3. Prison Reforms: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives
  • Vijay Raghavan
  • 4. Panchayats and Decentralization of Prisons: Role of Kiran Bedi in Transforming Tihar Jail
  • Sumit Mukherjee
  • Section Two: Rights of the Prisoners

  • 5. Rights of the Prisoners
  • Jeevan Ballav Panda
  • 6. Women Prisoners and their Rights
  • Debarati Halder
  • 7. Rights of Children of Prisoners
  • T. Lakshmi Narayana
  • 8. Rights of Elderly Prisoners: A Study in Tihar Central Prison
  • Megha Shree and Honey Aggarwal
  • Section Three: Issues of Offender Rehabilitation

  • 9. Probation: An Appraisal of Community-based Corrections
  • S. Ramdoss
  • 10. Is Parole Rehabilitating Offenders? An Analysis of Criminal Propensity and Psychological Well-being of Convicts
  • Amit Chaturvedi
  • 11. Criminality Among Convicted Offenders
  • Arvind Verma and Manish Kumar
  • Section Four: Innovations in Corrections

  • 12. Open Prisons in India
  • Tumpa Mukherjee and P. Periakaruppan
  • 13. Towards Techno-Corrections: A Frontline View of Hot New Practices and Technologies
  • P. Madhava Soma Sundaram
  • 14. Info-Tech Prisons in the New Millennium: International Perspectives
  • K. Jaishankar
  • 15. Strategies for Revamping the Indian Prison System
  • Priti Bharadwaj
  • Contributors

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