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Paperback Journal for Inmates: 8.5-inch by 11-inch Blank Journal With 101+ Pages Filled With Lines for Prisoners to Write In And Express Their Feelings - No Wire Spiral Binding, No Metals So Many Prisons Will Accept this Diary for Inmates This is not a moleskin journal, which may be a problem with sending journals to prison inmates. It has a plain, solid cover - not anything weird that would decrease the chances of the journal making it inside the prison and into the inmate's cell. The soft-cover paperback journal could very well help the person in prison get out an array of feelings in the absence of other things that are banned in prisons, like dirty magazines, cell phones, etc. Writing non-fiction or fiction as a form of escape can be a God-send to those who are in prison. In fact, Curtis Dawkins, a prisoner serving a life sentence in Michigan for murder was recently offered a book deal from Scribner, a top U.S. literary publishing house for his debut collection of short stories for $150,000. Inmate activity books can benefit idle minds and let people know that there are other ways to deal with their problems besides expressing their feelings through violence. When ordering through Amazon.com, make sure when you order this writing type of journal that the diary includes the inmate's registration number on it or it might not be delivered. As far as journals being sent to inmates in prison you have to be careful not to send journals to jails that have items that could be turned into weapons. No metal, leather, fabric, or spiral binding. Send this journal that has a cover that's paperback, not cardboard, and is bound like a regular book; it should go through fine. Volunteer groups sometimes send books to women and men in prison but some theorize that certain inmates may not receive the journals because the prison wants the inmates to buy journals from the prison commissaries. Most prisons accept only paperback books for inmates. Sending books and journals to prisons means you should search for the rules for your inmate's facility before mailing books. A county lock-up inmate means you should Google the county sheriff's web page for jail rules about inmate mail. Inmate ID numbers are required by most prisons, so put the SID or other inmate number as part of their last name when ordering. If the inmate number and prisoner's name doesn't match, the journal might not be delivered. With this journal containing lines, it should be safe because it doesn't contain banned language about prison escape, prison unrest, nude pictures, or sexual content like rape, sex with minors, S&M, incest, necrophilia, or homosexual sex, drug/bomb/weapon manufacturing, racial content, gang or criminal content. It is also not a banned tattoo book journal. Since this journal will be sent directly from Amazon, an approved prison vendor, the paperback journal should be accepted for inmates just fine.
A journal designed for couples who seek to maintain a relationship when one partner is incarcerated. Consists of over 250 simple, yet thought-provoking questions to aid couples in keeping their families together despite incarceration. Questions include: When loving someone through distance and time, what skills must one have? What are your expectations for homecoming?
Journal of the Librarian Who Went to Prison for Money By: Glennor Shirley Journal of the Librarian Who Went to Prison for Money discusses the positive transformation of prisoners who use prison libraries to educate themselves. The nation’s high rate of incarceration and high cost to taxpayers can be decreased with more emphasis on education. This book is unique because the letters from prisoners show their educational achievement after entering prison, and also humor, resilience, and the need for preparation for successful reentry. Readers can take away use more of taxpayers’ money to educate instead of incarcerate and provide more funds to prepare prisoners for successful reentry so prisoners become taxpayers.
Prison Journal - Paperback Journal for Inmates: 8.5-inch by 11-inch Blank Journal With 101+ Pages Filled With Lines for Prisoners to Write In And Express Their Feelings - No Wire Spiral Binding, No Metals So Many Prisons Will Accept this Diary for Inmates This is not a moleskin journal, which may be a problem with sending journals to prison inmates. It has a beautiful cover - not anything weird that would decrease the chances of the journal making it inside the prison and into the inmate's cell. The soft-cover paperback journal could very well help the person in prison get out an array of feelings in the absence of other things that are banned in prisons, like dirty magazines, cell phones, etc. Writing non-fiction or fiction as a form of escape can be a God-send to those who are in prison. In fact, Curtis Dawkins, a prisoner serving a life sentence in Michigan for murder was recently offered a book deal from Scribner, a top U.S. literary publishing house for his debut collection of short stories for $150,000. Inmate activity books can benefit idle minds and let people know that there are other ways to deal with their problems besides expressing their feelings through violence. When ordering through Amazon.com, make sure when you order this writing type of journal that the diary includes the inmate's registration number on it or it might not be delivered. As far as journals being sent to inmates in prison you have to be careful not to send journals to jails that have items that could be turned into weapons. No metal, leather, fabric, or spiral binding. Send this journal that has a cover that's paperback, not cardboard, and is bound like a regular book; it should go through fine. Volunteer groups sometimes send books to women and men in prison but some theorize that certain inmates may not receive the journals because the prison wants the inmates to buy journals from the prison commissaries. Most prisons accept only paperback books for inmates. Sending books and journals to prisons means you should search for the rules for your inmate's facility before mailing books. A county lock-up inmate means you should Google the county sheriff's web page for jail rules about inmate mail. Inmate ID numbers are required by most prisons, so put the SID or other inmate number as part of their last name when ordering. If the inmate number and prisoner's name doesn't match, the journal might not be delivered. With this journal containing lines, it should be safe because it doesn't contain banned language about prison escape, prison unrest, nude pictures, or sexual content like rape, sex with minors, S&M, incest, necrophilia, or homosexual sex, drug/bomb/weapon manufacturing, racial content, gang or criminal content. It is also not a banned tattoo book journal. Since this journal will be sent directly from Amazon, an approved prison vendor, the paperback journal should be accepted for inmates just fine.
When Boston politician Joseph Timilty was sent to the Schuylkill federal correctional institution to serve a four-month term because he refused to pull anyone else into the political dragnet he had been caught up in, he accepted his situation with dignity and courage. If he could survive four months with the marines at Parris Island, he told his family, he could survive this. For the next four months, he kept a secret diary that he smuggled out of prison in coded notes and letters to his wife. Intimate, poignant, and frequently hilarious,Prison Journal: An Irreverent Look at Life on the Inside is a compilation of his observations about his arrest and trial, his life in prison, and the aftereffects of his experiences. The book captures the paradox of prison life, a potent cocktail of high drama and dark comedy infused with exasperating ironies and inanities that will alternately make you laugh and cry. An intriguing memoir of a life-changing experience, Prison Journal provides an eye-opening look at a senseless system that squanders countless dollars on rigid bureaucracy and hypocritical rehabilitation efforts. And nine insightful recommendations look to move the prison system beyond the wasteful warehousing of nonviolent offenders to healing social wounds.
Inmates journal. Versatile journal can be used to document rehabilitation progress, self improvement and mindfulness or simply to note and reflect on your day. Features: Size 6" x 9" 128 pages Lined journal style pages Soft back Matte finish
The President and Vice President are elected from two different parties. They are old friends, but a conflict develops when the possibility of actual alien contact is discovered. A multitude of characters are infused into the relationship between the two. As contact with aliens is progressively confirmed, the political schism becomes less of an issue. The effects on humanity are brought to the forefront. Accepting the Truth causes dissension and distrust. Ultimately, choices of belief and the purpose of life are realized.
This book brings together a collection of social justice scholars and activists who take Foucault’s concept of discipline and punishment to explain how prisons are constructed in society from nursing homes to zoos. This book expands the concept of prison to include any institution that dominates, oppresses, and controls. Criminologists and others, who have been concerned with reforming or dismantling the criminal justice system, have mostly avoided to look at larger carceral structures in society. In this book, for example, scholars and activists question the way patriarchy has incapacitated women and imagine the deinstitutionalization of people with disabilities. In a time when popular sentiment critiques the dominant role of the elites (the “one percenters”), the state’s role in policing dissenting voices, school children, LGBTQ persons, people of color, and American Indian Nations, needs to be investigated. A prison, as defined in this book, is an institution or system that oppresses and does not allow freedom for a particular group. Within this definition, we include the imprisonment of nonhuman animals and plants, which are too often overlooked.
Use This Paperback Journal To Record All of Your Dreams, Goals and Thoughts. This journal is perfect to use as a diary or journal. The wide rule paper is perfect for writing, drawing or mapping out your thoughts and plans. It's also great for jotting down notes, planning events, and doodling. What you use this book for is really only limited by your imagination. The Cover - The cover is a sturdy paperback book with a glossy finish. The binding is the same as a standard paperback book. (The journal may need to be pressed open to lie flat.) Size Dimensions - 6" x 9" The Interior - The interior of the journal holds 100 pages (50 sheets) of wide rule paper. This journal does not contain prompts so you're able to engage in free flow writing and make this journal exactly what you want it to be. This journal is ideal for anyone who loves journaling. It makes a great gift for birthdays, Christmas, or any other holiday. Now that you've got all the details on this journal, click the buy button to get your copy today.
"The French Prime Minister who signed the Munich Agreement in 1938 and who one year later led his country into war against Hitler's Germany, Edouard Daladier was arrested by the Vichy regime and imprisoned in France and Germany until the war's end. As a pastime and a catharsis, Daladier wrote." "He wrote about what had happened to him and to his country, about day-to-day conditions in captivity, and about what he could glean of the anti-Nazi war effort through newspaper accounts, from the visits of his friends and family, and from his well-hidden radio receiver. He wrote of the accusations made against him by his former proteges and comrades-in-arms; and of his trial, during which the charges oddly metamorphosed from having declared war on Germany to not having sufficiently prepared France for battle (the charges were of little importance, as the verdict had been previously decided)." "Ever the statesman, Daladier wrote most of all about his hopes and fears for France and Europe - which hung so heavily, at first, upon the battlefield successes of the British, American, and Allied forces; and later, upon the Allies' refusal to recognize in Soviet power the danger of the very totalitarianism that they had been fighting to eliminate. At the war's end, witnessing the devastation of Germany, Daladier wrote with a poignant sympathy that is unexpectedly moving." "Daladier's notes remained forgotten and unpublished until twenty years after his death, when they were discovered and compiled by his son Jean. They are presented here in English for the first time. By turns sorrowful, enraged, humorous, and philosophical, this lively narrative gives fresh insights into the tangled politics of the era."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved