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Overcoming the Absurd: Prisoner Litigation as Primitive Rebellion

NCJ Number
116012
Journal
Social Problems Volume: 36 Issue: 1 Dated: (February 1989) Pages: 48-60
Author(s)
D Milovanovic; J Thomas
Date Published
1989
Length
13 pages
Annotation
Are those who use law in attempts to change the conditions of social existence rebels, revolutionaries, or merely ineffective idealists? Drawing upon themes from existential literature and our past research on prisons, we address this question by looking at one category of active litigants, prison jailhouse lawyers (JHLs).
Abstract
Exiled and powerless, prisoners have relatively few ways to resist either the control or the conditions imposed upon them by their State keepers. JHLs, however, actively resist prison staff and authority. We argue that JHL activity constitutes a form of rebellion and conclude that jailhouse lawyers may be best understood as primitive rebels. (Author abstract)

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