Transactions of the National Prison Congress

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American Correctional Association, 1877
Proceedings for 1884 and 1885 include report of conference of prison officials, Chicago, 1884, separately paged.
 

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3 Captain Brentons and Miss Murrays establishments
101
Prison reform in Gloucestershire
107
a Ragged churches
124
Homes for the HomelessThe boardingout system for pauper
130
SCTOLAND
142
Industrial employments
146
The objection that the education given in industrial and reformatory schools is superior to that attainable by the children of the labor ing class consid...
147
What should be done with indigent and illcared for children
148
Proportion of children saved
149
reformatory schools in Aberdeen
150
Early efforts looking towards prison reform
151
Patronage societies
152
Fresh impulse given to prison reform by the congress of London 87 The new law explained
153
Central prisons visited
154
Excellent effect of progressive classification
155
Visit to a detention prison near Copenhagen
156
SWEDEN
157
First impulse to prison reform given by King Oscar I
158
A new penal code
159
Tribute to Oscar II and the QueenDowager Josephine
161
penitentiary question
162
Classification of prisons
165
Religious and moral instruction in the Swedish prisons
167
11 Education in prisons
169
12 Labor in prisonsits organization and earnings
170
14 Thanks to officials
174
1 Spirit and character of the director
178
3 Moral history of the prisoner during his incarceration carefully recorded
179
6 The hearts of the prisoners reached through these agencies
180
10 Mr Petersens criticisms on his own prison
181
2 House of correction
183
Organization of labor in the prisons of Norway
184
SWITZERLAND
185
Lax state of penitentiary administration in the canton of Berne prior to the congress of London
186
Retribution the end hitherto proposed
187
The causes of crime inquired into and considered
188
11 Pecuniary responsibility of parents
189
Prisons of preliminary detention
190
14 Prisons for criminals under sentence
191
First stagecellular imprisonment
193
Second stageassociated labor by day and isolation at night
194
Third stageintermediate prison
195
Fourth stageconditional liberation
196
Dr Guillaume recommends the Crofton system in its completeness for the canton of Berne
197
Prison officers should receive a special education and be suitably compensated
198
The prison system should be a unithow this end may be secured
199
Importance of criminal statistics
200
Law students should have a course on penitentiary science and the penitentiary system
201
Principles of prison discipline as held and advocated by Mr de Fleury
202
b Hope
203
The prison to be also regarded as a place of punishment
204
Obstacles to the immediate adoption of the Crofton systems in Brazil arising out of its penal legislation
205
FRANCE
209
2 Analysis of the original work
210
5 Public assistance to be added to public instruction
211
8 The prison should be suppressed absolutely in matters of simple police
212
10 Aged and invalid delinquents need not a prison but an asylum
213
13 The prisoner should earn his livingwork an aid to reformation
214
17 Conditional liberation
215
20 The family of the criminal
217
21 Conclusion
218
3 Individual imprisonment the best for punishments of short du ration
219
6 A strong impulse given by the commission to the work of patronage
236
Criminal registers
237
3 Organization of the criminal registers
238
4 The criminal registers in an international point of view
241
3 Whether this duty should be discharged by the state or by pri vate charity
242
6 The maternal charity society
243
7 Infant nurseries crèches
244
8 The infant school salle dasile
246
9 The primary schools
247
10 Industrial and professional schools
250
11 Apprenticeship
253
12 Patronage societies in aid of apprentices
254
13 Children in the manufactories
256
14 An interesting history
258
dren
260
16 Juvenile delinquents and correctional education
266
RUSSIA
272
Transportation as a punishment condemned deportation as a regen erative force recommended
273
Penitentiary reform proposed by Catherine the Second
274
Important reform introduced by Nicolas I
275
Character of the reform proposed by the existing imperial commis sion
276
PORTUGAL
277
Position of the prisonstheir accessibility to the outside world
278
Bad effects of delay of trial
279
HOLLAND
280
3 Solution of this question proposed by the framers of the new penal code
281
5 The cellular system constantly gaining ground in Holland
282
6 Commission appointed in 1870 to prepare the draft of a new penal code
283
How the code deals with imprisonment
286
11 Extreme limit of sentences less than life
287
13 The cellular and progressive systems
288
14 Labor education religion discipline and conditional liberation
290
Cellular prison at Rotterdam
292
Suggestions and counsels by William H Suringar touching the visita tion of prisoners
294
BELGIUM
298
Classification of prisons
299
Distribution of earnings and other privileges
300
Administrative supervision of the prisons
301
Abbreviation of sentence
302
The pistole
303
School for the training of prison officers and employés
304
Suicide
305
Moral lectures
306
Discipline
311
at Hamburgthe foundation of the Rauhe Haus
326
8 The church day the central committeecongress of the inner
337
PART THIRDPAPERS SUBMITTED TO THE CONGRESS
346
Needed amendments in criminal procedure By Hon C I Walker
365
PAPERS ON THE PENITENTIARY SYSTEM
409
The Classification of prisoners with a view to their Reformation
417
Criminal Treatment By T B Ll Baker Visiting Justice Gloucester
457
PAPERS ON PREVENTIVE AND REFORMATORY INSTITUTIONS FOR CHILDREN
476
Comparative merits of the family and congregate system of treat
493
What are the most effective agencies for moral and religious education
502
PART FOURTH DISCUSSIONS ON THE PRECEDING PAPERS
551
DISCUSSION ON THE TREATMENT OF HABITUAL CRIMINALS
557
DISCUSSION ON THE IMPRISONMENT OF WITNESSES
563
66
569
DISCUSSION ON DISCHARGED PRISONERS
579
DISCUSSIONS ON PAPERS RELATING TO PREVENTIVE AND REFORMATORY
585
PART FIFTHLists of Officers DIRECTORS ETC OF THE NATIONAL PRISON
613

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