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- Annual report : North Carolina Correction Enterprises. by North Carolina Correction Enterprises.(CARDINAL)212950;
Description based on: 2008; title from cover.
- Subjects: North Carolina Correction Enterprises; Prison industries; Convict labor;
- Available copies: 8 / Total copies: 19
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- North Carolina Correction Enterprises / by North Carolina Correction Enterprises.(CARDINAL)212950;
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- Subjects: North Carolina Correction Enterprises; Prison industries; Convict labor;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 2
- On-line resources: Suggest title for digitization;
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- An abolitionist's handbook : 12 steps to changing yourself and the world [sound recording] / by Cullors, Patrisse,1983-author.; Blake, Ariel,narrator.;
Read by Ariel Blake.Cullors charts a framework for how everyday activists can effectively fight for an abolitionist present and future. Filled with relatable pedagogy on the history of abolition, a reimagining of what reparations look like for Black lives, and real-life anecdotes from Cullors, the book offers a bold, innovative, and humanistic approach to how to be a modern-day abolitionist. Cullors asks us to lead with love, fierce compassion, and precision.
- Subjects: Audiobooks.; Alternatives to imprisonment.; Prisons; Prison abolition movements.; Prison-industrial complex.;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- An abolitionist's handbook : 12 steps to changing yourself and the world / by Cullors, Patrisse,1983-author.;
Includes bibliographical references.Courageous conversations -- Respond vs. react -- Nothing is fixed -- Say yes to imagination -- Forgive actively, not passively -- Allow yourself to feel -- Commit to not harming or abusing others -- Practice accountability -- Embrace non-reformist reform -- Build community -- Value interpersonal relationships -- Fight the U.S. State rather than make it stronger."In AN ABOLITIONIST'S HANDBOOK, Cullors charts a framework for how everyday activists can effectively fight for an abolitionist present and future. Filled with relatable pedagogy on the history of abolition, a reimagining of what reparations look like for Black lives and real-life anecdotes from Cullors AN ABOLITIONIST'S HANDBOOK offers a bold, innovative, and humanistic approach to how to be a modern-day abolitionist. Cullors asks us to lead with love, fierce compassion, and precision. In AN ABOLITIONIST'S HANDBOOK readers will learn how to: - have courageous conversations - move away from reaction and towards response - take care of oneself while fighting for others - turn inter-community conflict into a transformative action - expand one's imagination, think creatively, and find the courage to experiment - make justice joyful - practice active forgiveness - make space for difficult feelings and honor mental health - practice non-harm and cultivate compassion - organize local and national governments to work towards abolition - move away from cancel culture AN ABOLITIONIST'S HANDBOOK is for those who are looking to reimagine a world where communities are treated with dignity, care and respect. It gives us permission to move away from cancel culture and into visioning change and healing"--
- Subjects: Alternatives to imprisonment.; Prisons; Prison abolition movements.; Prison-industrial complex.;
- Available copies: 15 / Total copies: 18
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- Prison profiteers : who makes money from mass incarceration / by Herivel, Tara.(CARDINAL)671902; Wright, Paul,1965-(CARDINAL)646654;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 297-323).Introduction / by Tara Herivel -- The political economy of prisons -- Banking on the prison boom / Judith Greene -- Million-dollar blocks: the neighborhood costs of America's prison boom / Jennifer Gonnerman -- Doing borrowed time: the high cost of backdoor prison finance / Kevin Pranis -- Making the "bad guy" pay: growing use of cost shifting as an economic sanction / Kirsten D. Levingston -- Prisons, politics, and the census / Gary Hunter and Peter Wagner -- Don't build it here: the hype versus the reality of prisons and local employment / Clayton Mosher, Gregory Hooks, and Peter B. Wood -- The cultural commodification of prisons / Paul Wright -- The private prison industry -- Prison labor fuels American war machine / Ian Urbina -- On the inside with the American Correctional Association / Silja J.A. Talvi -- Jails for Jesus / Samantha M. Shapiro -- Florida's private prison industry corporation under siege / David M. Reutter -- Making out like bandits -- Behind closed doors: privatized prisons for youth / Tara Herivel -- Sick on the inside: correctional HMOs and the coming prison plague / Wil S. Hylton -- Private health care in jails can be a death sentence / Paul von Zielbauer -- The riot academy: guards stage mock prison riots to test the latest high-tech gear / Jennifer Gonnerman -- Mapping the prison telephone industry / Stevn J. Jackson -- Shocked and stunned: the growing use of tasers / Anne-Marie Cusac -- For-profit transportation companies: taking prisoners and the public for a ride / Alex Friedmann.
- Subjects: Prison industries; Corrections; Imprisonment;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- Abolition for the people : the movement for a future without policing & prisons / by Kaepernick, Colin,1987-editor.(CARDINAL)609349; Davis, Angela Y.(Angela Yvonne),1944-writer of foreword.(CARDINAL)129182; Browne, Simone,1973-Feds are watching.; Neal, Mark Anthony.Myth of the good cop.; Laymon, Kiese.My son was executed by an ideal.; Nopper, Tamara K.Truth about "Officer Friendly."; Schrader, Stuart,1978-SWAT's paramilitary fever dream.; Lewis, Talila A.Disability justice is an essential part of abolishing police & ending incarceration.; Meiners, Erica R.Snaps!; Nopper, Tamara K.Schools as carceral spaces.; Ross, Kihana Miraya.How abolition makes schools safer.; Crenshaw, Kimberlé.We must center Black women.; Gali, Morning Star.Ongoing incarceration of California's Indigenous Peoples.; Spade, Dean,1977-Queer & trans liberation requires abolition.; Kilgore, James William,1947-Challenging e-carceration.; Jiménez Moreta, Cristina.Fight to melt ICE.; Farrow, Kenyon.Hidden pandemic.; Shoatz, Russell Maroon,1943-2020.My father deserves to be free.; Loggins, Ameer Hasan.We're all living in a future created by slavery.; Purnell, Derecka.Reforms are the master's tools.; Hamilton, Derrick.No justice, no freedom.; Rodriguez, Dylan.Police reform as counterinsurgency.; Bass, Bree Newsome.Putting a black face on police agendas.; Benjamin, Ruha.New Jim Code.; Kelley, Robin D. G.Change from the roots.; Abu-Jamal, Mumia.Casting off the shadows of slavery.; Murakawa, Naomi.Three traps of police reform.; Wun, Connie.Survivors at the forefront of the abolitionist movement.; Peterson, Marlon.Who is being healed?; Ritchie, Andrea J.Ending the war on black women.; Lumumba, Rukia.We can dismantle the system at the polls, too.; Berger, Dan.What is & what could be.; Kaba, Mariame.Journey continues.;
The former NFL star turned social activist presents 30 essays from political prisoners, grassroots organizers and scholars such as Angela Davis and Dereck Purnell that focus on the police and incarceration abolition movement.Includes bibliographical references (pages 244-284).Editors' preface: A journey to safer futures / Colin Kaepernick, Connie Wun, and Christopher Petrella -- Foreword: Believe in new possibilities / Angela Y. Davis -- Introduction: A future worth building / Colin Kaepernick -- The Feds are watching: a history of resisting anti-black surveillance / Simone Browne -- The myth of the good cop: pop culture helped turn police officers into rock stars--and black folks into criminals / Mark Anthony Neal -- My son was executed by an ideal: a conversation with Gwendolyn Woods / as told to Kiese Laymon -- The truth about "Officer Friendly" / Tamara K. Nopper -- SWAT's paramilitary fever dream: when police play soldier, everybody loses / Stuart Schrader -- Disability justice is an essential part of abolishing police & ending incarceration / Talila A. Lewis -- Snaps!: collective (queer) abolition organizing created this moment / Erica R. Meiners -- Schools as carceral spaces / Tamara K. Nopper -- How abolition makes schools safer: funneling our children from classrooms to cages ends now / Kihana Miraya Ross -- We must center black women: Breonna Taylor and bearing witness to black women's expendability / Kimberlé Crenshaw -- Stolen freedom: the ongoing incarceration of California's indigenous peoples / Morning Star Gali -- Queer & trans liberation requires abolition / Dean Spade -- Challenging e-carceration: abolition means no digital prisons / James Kilgore -- The carceral state / Tamara K. Nopper -- The fight to melt ICE: why we're fighting for a world without ICE / Cristina Jiménez Moreta and Cynthia Garcia -- The hidden pandemic: prisons are a public health crisis--and the cure is right in front of Us / Kenyon Farrow -- The long grip of mass incarceration / Tamara K. Nopper -- My father deserves to be free: a son's fight for his father's freedom / Russell "Maroon" Shoatz and Russell Shoatz III -- We're all living in a future created by slavery / Ameer Hasan Loggins -- Reforms are the master's tools: the system is built for power, not justice / Derecka Purnell -- No justice, no freedom: criminal justice reform cost me 21 years of my life / Derrick Hamilton -- police reform as counterinsurgency: how reformist approaches to police Violence expand police power and legitimate the next phase of domestic warfare / Dylan Rodríguez -- The extent of carceral control / Tamara K. Nopper -- Three traps of police reform / Naomi Murakawa -- Putting a black face on police agendas: black cops don't make policing any less anti-black / Bree Newsome Bass -- The new Jim Code: the shiny, high-tech wolf in sheep's clothing / Ruha Benjamin -- Change from the roots: what abolition looks like, from the Panthers to the people / Robin D. G. Kelley -- Casting off the shadows of slavery: lessons from the first abolition movement / Mumia Abu-Jamal -- Survivors at the forefront of the abolitionist movement / Connie Wun -- Who is being healed?: creating solutions is about answering questions prisons never asked / Marlon Peterson -- Ending the war on black women: building a world where Breonna Taylor could live / Andrea J. Ritchie -- Bankrolling the carceral state / Tamara K. Nopper -- We can dismantle the system at the polls, too / Rukia Lumumba -- What is & what could be: the policies of abolition / Dan Berger and David Stein -- The journey continues: so you're thinking about becoming an abolitionist / Mariame Kaba.
- Subjects: Alternatives to imprisonment; Prison abolition movements; Civil rights movements; Prison-industrial complex;
- Available copies: 12 / Total copies: 12
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- Abolition for the people : the movement for a future without policing & prisons / by Kaepernick, Colin,1987-editor.(CARDINAL)609349;
Abolition for the People brings together thirty essays representing a diversity of voices―political prisoners, grassroots organizers, scholars, and relatives of those killed by the anti-Black terrorism of policing and prisons. This collection presents readers with a moral choice: "Will you continue to be actively complicit in the perpetuation of these systems," Kaepernick asks in his introduction, "or will you take action to dismantle them for the benefit of a just future?"
- Subjects: Prisons; Prison-industrial complex; Police; Discrimination in criminal justice administration; Police.;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- Race, labor, and punishment in the new South / by Myers, Martha A.(CARDINAL)338458;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 301-316) and index.Social change and the rise of the penitentiary -- Forms of punishment in Georgia -- Social change and the use of the penitentiary -- Modeling use of the penitentiary in Georgia -- Admissions to the penitentiary -- Prison sentences -- Release from the penitentiary -- The self-regulation of punishment -- Understanding punishment in Georgia -- App. A. The relationship among social change series -- App. B. Conditional and unconditional release from the penitentiary -- App. C. Black property values and prison sentences.
- Subjects: Criminal justice, Administration of; Convict labor; Prisoners; Prison industries; Urbanization; Industrialization;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
- On-line resources: Suggest title for digitization;
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- Report on audit of Federal Prison Industries, Inc. Letter from Comptroller General of the United States transmitting a report on the audit of Federal Prison Industries, Inc., for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1951, pursuant to the Government Corporation Control Act (31 U.S.C. 841). February 6, 1952. -- Referred to the Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments and ordered to be printed. by United States.Congress.House.(CARDINAL)146036; United States.General Accounting Office.(CARDINAL)155659;
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- Subjects: Legislative materials.; Auditing.; Convict labor.; Revenue.; Factory and trade waste.; Government corporations.; Financial statements.;
- On-line resources: Click for online content.;
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- NC Prisons photo collection [kit] by North Carolina Museum of Art,compiler.(CARDINAL)150432; North Carolina Museum of Art.Art Reference Library,compiler.(CARDINAL)861636;
Collection consists of images of various correctional facilities in North Carolina with a considerable amount of material centering Polk Prison Farm, later Polk Youth Center, and Caledonia Prison Farm. Found within the collection are official photographs from the N.C. Department of Corrections; images captured by NY based photographer A.F. Sozio; photos of Polk at various stages ranging from the WWI military encampment Camp Polk to images of Polk Youth Center in 1973. The collection was discovered in the holdings of the North Carolina Museum of Art, and compiled by the North Carolina Museum of Art Library.In 1920, the North Carolina State Prison (early name for the N.C. Department of Corrections) acquired a 2,600 acre WWI tank training site and transitioned it into a prison farming facility, Polk Prison Farm. Polk Prison Farm would become Polk Youth Center in December 1963. Young offenders incarcerated there could learn skills that would help them become electricians, carpenters, bricklayers, or mechanics. Despite the removal of Polk's older population the citizens of Raleigh and the communities closest to Polk expressed displeasure at the prison's existence. In 1973 the Council of the State transferred 100 acres of Polk land to the Art Museum Building Commission for a new museum. A new site with the name Polk Youth Center opened in 1997 in Butner, Granville County. February 7, 2001, 45 acres of Polk land were transferred to the Department of Natural and Cultural Resources to be used by the North Carolina Museum of Art. The only remaining indicator of the land's time as a correctional institute is the smokestack that is now the NCMA Wecome Center.
- Subjects: Convict labor; Imprisonment; Juvenile corrections.; Prison-industrial complex; Polk Correctional Institution (Butner, N.C.); Prison educators;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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