<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<metadata>
  <identifier>BookRelease-WhenThePrisonersRanWalpole</identifier>
  <title>Book Release - When the Prisoners Ran Walpole</title>
  <creator>Book is by Jamie Bissonette; audio recording is by Stan Robinson of Truth and Justice Radio (truthandjusticeradio.org).</creator>
  <mediatype>audio</mediatype>
  <collection>opensource_audio</collection>
  <description>Proceedings 4-17-08 celebrating the release of the book "When the Prisoners Ran Walpole: A True Story in the Movement for Prison Abolition" by Jamie Bissonette with others (South End Press, 2008). Numerous prominent speakers.&#13;
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In 1971, Attica's prison yard massacre shocked the public, prisoners, and political leaders across the United States. Massachusetts residents pledged to prevent such slaughter from ever happening there, and the governor agreed. Thus began a move for reform that eventually led to the prisoners at Walpole's Massachusetts Correctional Institute winning control of its day-to-day operations.&#13;
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"When the Prisoners Ran Walpole" brings this vital history to life, revealing what can happen when there is public will for change and trust that the incarcerated can achieve it. In the months before they took over running the maximum-security facility in 1973, prisoners and outside advocates created programs that sent more prisoners home for good, slowing the turn of the famous revolving door by 23 percent and decreasing Walpole's population by 15 percent.&#13;
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When guards protested the changes they saw as choking their livelihoods, finally refusing to run the prison, the prisoners stepped ably into the void and all-out peace ensued. They shrank the murder rate from the highest in the country to zero. Even more significantly, they worked hard to bury racial antagonism and longstanding feuds so even lifers with no hope of going home could find ways to live together, learn, and grow to regain, finally, the humanity that the system intended to squash. &#13;
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Critical to the work of prison abolitionists and transitional reformists alike, this groundbreaking history offers a real-life example of a prison solution many see only as theoretical. It not only reminds us why people seek to make prisons obsolete, but also recalls a time when we were much closer to these abolitionist goals.</description>
  <date>2008-04-17</date>
  <year>2008</year>
  <subject>Prisons; abolition; Walpole</subject>
  <licenseurl>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/publicdomain/</licenseurl>
  <publicdate>2008-04-23 20:07:05</publicdate>
  <addeddate>2008-04-23 19:58:40</addeddate>
  <uploader>stanrob@world.oberlin.edu</uploader>
  <updater>stanrob</updater>
  <updatedate>2008-04-25 15:45:02</updatedate>
  <taper>Stan Robinson</taper>
  <source>Gmini 400</source>
  <runtime>1:44:21</runtime>
  <notes>Recorded by Stan Robinson of WZBC's Truth &amp; Justice Radio, with permission, using a tiny Archos Gmini 400. (You might hear the Gmini's hard disk spinning-up about every five minutes as it stores that much audio.)&#13;
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Listen to Truth &amp; Justice Radio on WZBC 90.3 FM every Sunday morning at 6-10am ET. Also streamed live at wzbc.org; TJR's website (truthandjusticeradio.org) has playlists with links to TJR's archived audio.</notes>
  <updatedate>2008-04-25 15:55:52</updatedate>
  <updater>stanrob</updater>
</metadata>
