Online symposium on “pay-to-stay” prisons
As detailed in this post at Concurring Opinions, the Michigan Law Review’s companion journal First Impressions today has this new online symposium on “Pay-to-Stay Programs in Correctional Facilities.” Though I do not view the “pay-to-stay” phenomenon to be the most pressing concern in the world of sentencing and corrections, the pieces in this symposium all seem worth a read. Here are the titles:
- Pay-to-Stay in California Jails and the Value of Systemic Self-Embarassment
- It Could Happen to “You”: Pay-to-Stay Jail Upgrades
- The Dirty Little Secrets about Pay-to-Stay
- Government Entrepreneurship: How COP, Direct Supervision, and a Business Plan Helped to Solve Santa Ana’s Crime Problems
- Why the County Jail Is Often a Better Choice
- A Virtuous State Would Not Assign Correctional Housing Based on Ability to Pay