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Prison newspaper

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Prison newspapers are newspapers created within a prison, typically by the inmates.

History

The first prison newspaper is believed to have appeared in the 19th century in a debtors' prison.[1]: 86  Prison reformers in the US created a prison newspaper at the Elmira Reformatory in 1883.[2]: 36–38  It was "carefully assembled not to include items that officials deemed to have a bad influence on the inmates" and was instead intended for rehabilitative purposes.[2]: 40  The first inmate-driven paper was created at the Minnesota Correctional Facility in 1887.[3]

A 1935 study, the first on the topic, found that almost half of US prisons had a prison newspaper.[3] The genre reached its height in the 1960s in the United States, at which point circulation was approximately 2 million readers across 250 publications.[1]: 86 During this period "active and alert prison reporting" became more common, with inmates highlighting problems within the prison system.[4] The "Pulitzers of prison journalism", the Penal Press Awards, were awarded annually beginning in 1965.[5]

However, they faced issues around freedom of the press, as critiques of prison practices were met with institutional censorship.[1]: 87 In 1974, in the US Supreme Court case of Pell v. Procunier, the court ruled to uphold a California state restriction against prison inmates being interviewed face-to-face by the press. Journalists and inmates had contended that this restriction violated the First Amendment.[6] This ruling "largely replaced" earlier precedents supportive of prison reporting; subsequent court decisions also held that "the prison's security interests trumped the free speech rights of inmates" and that prisons could entirely forbid prison newspapers.[1]: 87  Similar patterns and tensions emerged in other parts of the world, such as Canada.[7]: 98  These pressures resulted in a quick and significant decline in the number of prison newspapers in publication between the 1970s and 1990s, with just six operating in 1998.[3][1]: 87  However, more recently, "alongside a surge in bipartisan interest in criminal justice reform, prison journalism has reemerged and garnered the attention and support of funders, politicians, and the public".[8] As of 2023 there are an estimated 24 prison newspapers in the US.[9]

Reporting

Early prison newspapers were typically "devoted to inmate activities: sports events, movies and other entertainment, personal items, blood banks, school and organizational activities, hobbies, and the like".[7]: 90  Humour was also often featured.[7]: 91  Sports remain a popular topic of reporting.[10] Depending on the level of censorship at a particular institution, such papers may carry stories critical of the prison administration.[10][11] With the modern aging prison population in the US, obituaries have also become a feature.[10]

Challenges within the prison system, including potential reprisals against prison journalists, complicate reporting.[12] The US Federal Bureau of Prisons has an explicit ban on journalism by inmates, while most US states have restrictions that negatively impact journalism from within jails.[13]

Notable examples

  • Forlorn Hope was the first prison newspaper in the US, begun in 1800.[11]
  • The Prison Mirror, first published in 1887, is the oldest continuously operating prison newspaper.[11][5]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Amy E. Lerman & Vesla M. Weaver (2014). Arresting Citizenship: the democratic consequences of American crime control. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226137971
  2. ^ a b James McGrath Morris (2002). Jailhouse journalism: the fourth estate behind bars. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 9780765808912.
  3. ^ a b c Kate McQueen. Prison Newspaper Project. Retrieved 3 February 2024.
  4. ^ James Nelson Goodsell (March 1959). "The penal press: voice of the prisoner". Federal Probation, p. 54.
  5. ^ a b Wilbert Rideau & Linda Labranche (25 June 2014). Can a free press flourish behind bars?. The Nation.
  6. ^ John Vile (15 December 2023). Pell v. Procunier (1974). Free Speech Center at Middle Tennessee State University.
  7. ^ a b c Christ Clarkson & Melissa Munn (2021). Disruptive Prisoners: resistance, reform, and the New Deal. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9781487525910
  8. ^ Olivia Heffernan (29 April 2022). Why prison journalism matters. Jacobin.
  9. ^ Hanaa' Tameez (14 March 2023). The Prison Newspaper Directory finds that the number of prison-based papers is growing. NiemanLab.
  10. ^ a b c d Morgan Godvin (13 May 2022). The Angolite Comes to the Reveal Digital American Prison Newspapers Collection. JSTOR Daily.
  11. ^ a b c Phoebe Judge (7 July 2023). The Prison Newspaper. Criminal.
  12. ^ Yukari Kane (20 September 2021). Lessons learned from a scoop out of San Quentin. Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute, University of Missouri.
  13. ^ Brian Nam-Sonenstein (15 June 2023). Breaking news from inside: how prisons suppress prison journalism. Prison Policy Initiative.
  14. ^ Sewell Chan (11 February 2020). Review: 'Prison Truth' takes readers inside San Quentin's inmate-run newspaper. Los Angeles Times.

Further reading

External links

This page was last edited on 3 February 2024, at 21:53
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