For this purpose, victims of mass incarceration represent parts of the system, with mass incarceration being the whole system. Furthermore, these incarcerated individuals often have families that they leave behind when they become incarcerated, which represent another system. Lastly, the system of mass incarceration and the collateral consequences of mass incarceration, namely families effected by it, become a different system. All these systems must be evaluated together and a part from one another. The system of mass incarceration is am open systems as opposed to closed systems. The individuals within the system and the system as a whole are effect by other system and the interactions that happen within those systems. The incarcerated individuals who are in the system are impacted by individuals outside of the system such as policy makers and the general public. For example, The War on Drugs an Tough on Crime, were two …show more content…
Therefore, individuals who consume goods and services provided from corporations that participate in the system are also interacting with the system in an impactful way despite not being a part of the system. In addition to this, research indicates that prisoners have a very oppressed role in the incarceration system. They are incarcerated for unfair and discriminatory policies that serve to benefit corporations looking to use incarcerated populations as free labor (Sundury, 2005). Therefore, individuals purchasing from corporations that are a part of the prison industrial complex, means that they are also interacting with the systems that policy makers reside in by an impetus for policies that incarcerate more people and therefore provide a larger work force for