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12 Prison Food

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Manage episode 202447073 series 2079261
Content provided by Decarceration Nation (with Josh and Joel) and Decarceration Nation (with Josh. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Decarceration Nation (with Josh and Joel) and Decarceration Nation (with Josh or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Josh and Joel discuss the problems with prison food.

The story about the Alabama Sheriff who spent money allocated for food for his jail prisoners to buy a beach house is pretty unbelievable but 100% true.

Yup, I was part of the lucky group of inmates who got to "brown bag it" for a few months at the Macomb County Jail. Hey Kool-Aid!

I think it is awesome that inmates all over Michigan donate the vegetables grown in their gardens to food banks, I just think the program should be expanded to include fresh vegetables for inmates too.

This is the article in the Atlantic magazine discussing the high-level of pathogens in prison food compared to food in the general population.

You can find the data the Atlantic magazine discussed in this study in the American Journal of Public Health.

There are lots of post-mortems on Michigan's privatization experiment. Here is one from the Metro Times.

This well-researched Prison Policy Initiative article makes the long-term vs. short-term argument about the health care externality in serving unhealthy prison food to inmates.

Judge Quist's decision, detailing the extensive legal barriers to getting prisoner relief for poor quality foods, is reproduced here.

Believe it or not, this article in Corrections One magazine agreed that good prison food is a safety issue.

This University of Michigan study demonstrated, through extensive interviews with Michigan Correctional Officers, that Michigan's experiment with privatization was a disaster.

I mistakenly referred to a Correctional Officer as a guard, we never call CO's guard as a general rule (because they don't technically guard anyone). This is not just snark, it is actually not their job to guard inmates.

  continue reading

146 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 202447073 series 2079261
Content provided by Decarceration Nation (with Josh and Joel) and Decarceration Nation (with Josh. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Decarceration Nation (with Josh and Joel) and Decarceration Nation (with Josh or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Josh and Joel discuss the problems with prison food.

The story about the Alabama Sheriff who spent money allocated for food for his jail prisoners to buy a beach house is pretty unbelievable but 100% true.

Yup, I was part of the lucky group of inmates who got to "brown bag it" for a few months at the Macomb County Jail. Hey Kool-Aid!

I think it is awesome that inmates all over Michigan donate the vegetables grown in their gardens to food banks, I just think the program should be expanded to include fresh vegetables for inmates too.

This is the article in the Atlantic magazine discussing the high-level of pathogens in prison food compared to food in the general population.

You can find the data the Atlantic magazine discussed in this study in the American Journal of Public Health.

There are lots of post-mortems on Michigan's privatization experiment. Here is one from the Metro Times.

This well-researched Prison Policy Initiative article makes the long-term vs. short-term argument about the health care externality in serving unhealthy prison food to inmates.

Judge Quist's decision, detailing the extensive legal barriers to getting prisoner relief for poor quality foods, is reproduced here.

Believe it or not, this article in Corrections One magazine agreed that good prison food is a safety issue.

This University of Michigan study demonstrated, through extensive interviews with Michigan Correctional Officers, that Michigan's experiment with privatization was a disaster.

I mistakenly referred to a Correctional Officer as a guard, we never call CO's guard as a general rule (because they don't technically guard anyone). This is not just snark, it is actually not their job to guard inmates.

  continue reading

146 episodes

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