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<SPAN STYLE= "" >Beyond the Prison Gates  </SPAN>

344 pp., 6.125 x 9.25, 8 illus., notes, bibl., index

Studies in Legal History

Cloth
ISBN  978-0-8078-3204-2
Published: January 2009

Beyond the Prison Gates

Punishment and Welfare in Germany, 1850-1933

By Warren Rosenblum


Awards & Distinctions

2009 Baker-Burton Award, Southern Historical Association European History Section

Germany today has one of the lowest incarceration rates in the industrialized world, and social welfare principles play an essential role at all levels of the German criminal justice system. Warren Rosenblum examines the roots of this social approach to criminal policy in the reform movements of the Wilhelmine and Weimar periods, when reformers strove to replace state institutions of control and incarceration with private institutions of protective supervision.

Reformers believed that private charities and volunteers could diagnose and treat social pathologies in a way that coercive state institutions could not. The expansion of welfare for criminals set the stage for a more economical system of punishment, Rosenblum argues, but it also opened the door to new, more expansive controls over individuals marked as "asocial." With the reformers' success, the issue of who had power over welfare became increasingly controversial and dangerous. Other historians have suggested that the triumph of eugenics in the 1890s was predicated upon the abandonment of liberal and Christian assumptions about human malleability. Rosenblum demonstrates, however, that the turn to "criminal biology" was not a reaction against social reform, but rather an effort to rescue its legitimacy.

About the Author

Warren Rosenblum is associate professor of history at Webster University in St. Louis, Missouri.




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