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Indians in Prison Elizabeth S. Grobsmith

Indians in Prison By Elizabeth S. Grobsmith

Indians in Prison by Elizabeth S. Grobsmith


$18.99
Condition - Well Read
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Summary

Presents comparative data on Indians incarcerated in other states and offer recommendations for dealing with recurrent problems. This title focus on how the social environments of Indian youth contribute to their delinquency and substance abuse and how Indians in prison perceive rehabilitation strategies, parole, and the law.

Indians in Prison Summary

Indians in Prison: Incarcerated Native Americans in Nebraska by Elizabeth S. Grobsmith

Penologists, social services administra-tors, and students of criminal justice as well as of Indian studies will welcome this groundbreaking study, the product of close observation of and direct involvement on behalf of Indians in the Nebraska state penal system. Opening with a group profile, it discusses in detail the special concerns of that population: cultural and spiritual activities (Indians incarcerated in Nebraska were among the first to seek court permission to practice their religion behind bars), the seriously underestimated rates of alcoholism and drug addiction and the need for culturally appropriate treatment, and high rates of recidivism and their effect on parole. The final chapters present comparative data on Indians incarcerated in other states and offer recommendations for dealing with recurrent problems. Indians in Prison is particularly timely for its focus on how the social environments of Indian youth contribute to their delinquency and substance abuse and how Indians in prison perceive rehabilitation strategies, parole, and the law.

Indians in Prison Reviews

The subject of Indians in prison is of great importance not only because of the increasing Native American population in prisons (and the consequences for Indian life) but because that population is so disproportionately high. This first book-length study of the subject surveys the topic comparatively, incorporating detail based on firsthand ethnographic study and at the same time the hard data necessary to make it a definitive survey. Thus it is a major contribution to the field of American Indian studies.-Raymond J. DeMallie, Indiana University

About Elizabeth S. Grobsmith

Elizabeth Grobsmith is a professor of anthropology and assistant vice chancellor for academic affairs at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

Additional information

GOR012422781
9780803221376
0803221371
Indians in Prison: Incarcerated Native Americans in Nebraska by Elizabeth S. Grobsmith
Used - Well Read
Hardback
University of Nebraska Press
19940201
215
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book. We do our best to provide good quality books for you to read, but there is no escaping the fact that it has been owned and read by someone else previously. Therefore it will show signs of wear and may be an ex library book

Customer Reviews - Indians in Prison