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Law Response 12: Criminology According to Garret Maurice, the most appropriate way of protesting inmates from assault would be to increase supervision. In my opinion, I believe this is an excellent technique because it would not only reduce the inmates who are victimized, but it would also reduce the number of victims who would turn into victimizers as a way of revenging. Maurice provides an excellent discussion regarding how Fuller and Orsagh’s study in 1977 results showed that the likelihood of inmates engaging in violence was higher when there was no prison reorganization (Wooldredge & Thistlethwaite, 2014).
The grouping of inmates according to their age, background and chances of being more violent was also seen to improve the situation according to the study results given by Fuller and Orsagh (Wooldredge & Thistlethwaite, 2014).Based on the recommendations that Maurice provides in his discussion, it is evident that they can easily be implemented even on a low-budget. Nonetheless, Maurice also says that re-organizing the prison populations would also be helpful in eliminating the cases of prisoners who get assaulted, whether it is based on age or a person’s race.
Lastly, Maurice has not only discussed some of the most useful things that the prison staff could do to reduce cases of assault, but he has also organized his work in neat paragraphs. In addition, his sentences are well spaced and there is no paragraph that has inconsistently spaced paragraphs. The discussion is also not too lengthy, which makes the reading of each paragraph easy. Maurice also persuades the reader that more supervision in prisons is important when he uses illustrations that are simple.
For example, he says that getting prisons to have more supervisors in each floor is not possible since the economy today is not too favorable.ReferenceWooldredge ., J & Thistlethwaite., A. (2014). Forty Studies that Changed Criminal Justice: Explorations into the History of Criminal Justice Research. Boston, MA: Little, Brown & Company
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