Prison industrial complex
The prison industrial complex describes the ways the government and the private sector benefit by using surveillance, policing, and imprisonment as “solutions” to economic, social and political problems; the intertwining of structures that enable profit to be generated from incarceration and, by proxy, continued oppression. - Critical Resistance & the work of Angela Davis, adapted by Michelle Xie [1]
Examples of the Prison Industrial Complex
- In 2016, Canada’s crime rates hit a 45-year low. Yet, incarceration rates hit an all time high. [2]
- The majority of people incarcerated in Canada are denied bail and incarcerated in advance of their trial. This means they are legally innocent.
- [3]
- Indigenous Peoples are incarcerated 10x more often than non-Indigenous citizens; an example of systemic racism [4]
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- ↑ https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1HC35f2kDXc8cgLYWc9_oUZmINoTfP3_I
- ↑ http://www.intersectionalanalyst.com/intersectional-analyst/2017/7/20/everything-you-were-never-taught-about-canadas-prison-systems
- ↑ http://www.intersectionalanalyst.com/intersectional-analyst/2017/7/20/everything-you-were-never-taught-about-canadas-prison-systems
- ↑ https://www.oci-bec.gc.ca/cnt/rpt/oth-aut/oth-aut20121022info-eng.aspx