The Indeterminate Sentence: What Shall Be Done with the Criminal Class?
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About This Book
The essay examines a small but entrenched criminal class that lives by crime, arguing that short, successive terms and current penal practices socialize and harden offenders instead of reforming them. It treats the problem as economic and educational, outlines the fiscal and social costs of sustaining an outlaw class, and distinguishes this targeted concern from broader prison-reform issues such as poverty and juvenile exposure. As a remedy it advocates an indeterminate sentence system intended to incapacitate habitual offenders, deter prospective criminals, and create opportunities for disciplined, scientific rehabilitation.
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