TY - JOUR PY - 2008// TI - "Degenerate criminals" mental health and psychiatric studies of Danish prisoners in solitary confinement, 1870--1920 JO - Criminal justice and behavior A1 - Smith, Peter Scharff SP - 1048 EP - 1064 VL - 35 IS - 8 N2 - Inspired by the breakthrough of the discipline of criminology and biological theories of degeneration, prison psychiatry became a flourishing field during the latter decades of the 19th century. This is reflected in the history of the Vridsløselille penitentiary in Denmark, which operated as a Pennsylvania-model institution with strict solitary confinement from 1859 to the early 1930s. Throughout the period, this prison experienced extensive problems with inmate mental health, and as the discipline of psychiatry developed, mental disorders were given new names and old diseases disappeared. Although prison authorities were willing to acknowledge the damaging effects of the isolation regimes being employed, a number of psychiatrists located the causes of mental disorders among biological dispositional traits rather than situational factors. In doing so, they downplayed the power of the prison context and offered biological "degeneration" among criminals as an alternative explanation.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0093-8548 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0093854808318782 ID - ref1 ER -