Highlighted topics:
* Corrections budget competes with educational funding (page number, as noted at the bottom of page, 133)
* What defines crime, in contrast to destruction? (p. 137)
* What distinguishes a sociopath from someone who merely has an antisocial personality disorder? (p. 154)
* What do abusers aim to achieve? (p. 195)
* Why do victims commonly feel alienated from the police? (p. 387)
* How do prisons promote gangs? (p. 587)
* The curse at the prison gates (p. 599)
* Prisons' refrain: Homelessness (p. 624)
* Drugs' role at release (p. 667)
* Drug rehabilitation's elusive goals (p. 695)
* Prison and death preferred to abstinence (p. 735)
* Felons' relationship with God (p. 744)
* Felons' children offer hope of redemption (p. 773)
* A transformative experience helps at re-entry (p. 845)
* Meditation lifts some (ex)prisoners upward (p. 873)
* Both drug usage and prison used as a defense (p. 925)
* The media's usage of felons to direct anger away from the government (p. 940)
* If both prisonization and release intend to destroy felons, what is the psychological importance of this process? (p. 1006)
* Prison, release, and re-entry exemplify time-out, a process not entirely dissimilar from punishing children (p. 1127)
* How do (ex)prisoners conceive of their role par rapport of the government and everyday society? (p. 1309)
* The unconscious as the gateway to society's reform (p. 1390)
* The essence of the cure: Recognition of self-parts (p. 1492)
* Criminals within ourselves (p. 1517)
* Synopsis (p. 1559)
May this book bestow greater clarity and hopefulness, while empowering us to address the seemingly intractable social problems that impact us all.