RT Article T1 Order or stability: the role of penal administrators in the transformation of instability within correctional institution JF Deviant behavior VO 45 IS 1 SP 26 OP 49 A1 Cerrato, Salvatore LA English YR 2024 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1878001884 AB Within unstable correctional institutions, inexperienced politically appointed penal administrators achieve order at the expense of stability. Order, defined as involuntary inmate compliance with prison norms, depends upon the appendages of formal and informal social controls. In contrast, stability is voluntary inmate conformity to prescribed prison objectives, realized through democratic, non-placating administrative mechanisms. Inexperienced penal administrators perceive order to be analogous to stability, thereby tolerating, supporting, and perpetuating chaotic correctional institutions. In introducing original scholarship to the correctional literature, I draw from decades of experience working as a correctional officer within unstable, zoo-like penal institutions. I describe the practical failure of emphasizing order over stability. Within the parameters of this inclusive correctional taxonomy, order, given its volatility, becomes a formidable, yet fragile fault line that can alter an institution’s social climate. Also discussed are the salutary effects embodied in participatory management; the criminogenic ramifications that manifest from our prisons’ weak, ineffective, and underwhelming disciplinary apparatuses encouraging inmates to offend the prison’s prohibitions; and the penological oversights of unscrupulous prison practices that stem from the intellectual failings of out-of-touch academics who are far removed from real-world correctional environments to offer viable solutions. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 47-49 K1 Strafvollzug K1 Anstaltsklima K1 Stabilität K1 Anweisungen K1 Berufserfahrung DO 10.1080/01639625.2023.2237167