There are all shapes and sizes in prisons, some without walls and keys. This is clear from Kate Chopin's short stories "Desiree's Baby", "One-Hour Story", "Storm". All Chopin's main female characters are captured by their role as a wife. The first name of the 19th century Kate Chopin, Catherine off Lahti, was born in St. Louis on July 12, 1850. Her father, Thomas Oculherty, was in the United States since 1823, and he moved to Cents in 1825.
Articles from the Atlantic Ocean called "wallless prisons" are not only about detaining penal servants who break the law; they also have the ability to socialize people who were not in other facilities such as homes, schools, workplaces It helps to plant rules. In disciplinary action "Discipline and Punishment: Birth of a Prison", Michelle Foucault analyzed the famous model prison of a 19th century British philosopher Jeremy Bentham. Bentham's "Panopticon" is a circular building with a central guardrail that displays all the cells around it. Although the cell remains illuminated, the observation tower is dark, so you can observe the prisoner at any time, but it is impossible to know when it is being observed. The goal is to have them learn to behave as if they are under surveillance. It is time for architects to build a fair society and find new ways to build new buildings with better institution. Is the director the answer to justice?
The safest prison (the safest prison facility) is usually a huge building with high masonry walls or electric fences that place importance on safety. Prisoners are often under surveillance, their behavior is severely limited, and many people need to stay in their cells almost all day. Recreation in the outdoors is rare, and when you are permitted, you usually access by phone, there is a glass partition between the prisoner and the visitor. Approximately 130 of these top security prisons contain more than 100,000 prisoners.
Protection is often referred to as a wallless prison. This is a bad explanation, and the position of the trial and the prison are contrasted violently in almost every respect. This contrast shows some of the reasons why I think the former is a more effective way to change a criminal from a crime. In prison, perpetrators are in an abnormal situation, which is essentially morality and infringement of ordinary personality. The probationary observation rotated around his influence to make him healthy, improve his morale and strengthen his personality. The prison deprived him of what he thought, deciding himself, and the need to face economic problems. The probation observation allowed him to get up and asked him to stand up to the common problem of working the world every single day. With few exceptions, the prison handled him on a large scale. Protective observation treats him as an individual. (MacCormik, 1935, p. 400 __ 4)