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This edition exposes a hard truth: Alabama’s prison system increasingly treats incarcerated people as financial assets rather than human beings. Through work-release labor, wage deductions, and institutional incentives, profit is prioritized while violence, understaffing, and failed rehabilitation persist. The result is a system that generates revenue without accountability—at significant human and public-safety costs.
ALPRP challenges this model by demanding transparency, ethical labor standards, and a shift from extraction to rehabilitation.
By R. L. RobinsonThis edition exposes a hard truth: Alabama’s prison system increasingly treats incarcerated people as financial assets rather than human beings. Through work-release labor, wage deductions, and institutional incentives, profit is prioritized while violence, understaffing, and failed rehabilitation persist. The result is a system that generates revenue without accountability—at significant human and public-safety costs.
ALPRP challenges this model by demanding transparency, ethical labor standards, and a shift from extraction to rehabilitation.