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Frontline Sociological Analysis

656 Words3 Pages

The PBS production of Frontline displays that environment impacts human behavior. Of the total two million prison inmates in America, 500,000 of them are mentally ill. The mentally ill that are in prisons end up in isolated rooms separate from everyone else, they have twenty-four-seven solitary confinement. Most prison inmates lead their lives to depression or suicide. The mentally ill prison inmates that get released, usually end up back in jail because they do not take their proper medications regularly. Not all mentally ill people are dangerous, in fact, most are not, they become dangerous when they don’t take their prescribed medication. The dangerous ones end up not having a support system. The way society acts embark the impacts of the mentally ill. The Frontline production does not portray the sociological perspective. According the sociology text book, “understanding human behavior by placing it within its broader social context,” is the …show more content…

Those mentally ill prison inmates not properly prescribed can refer to the term deviation, “the violation of norms (or rules or expectations),” those are the one the ones that commit the crimes more frequently (Henslin 2017, pg. 198). Crimes are “the violations of norms written into law. After the mentally ill leave prison they release them back on the streets, because most become homeless and have no home to go back too. Having a funded place for the mentally ill to go after their prison sentence is eliminate might solve the problem after all. Like in the documentary, after his prison sentence, they sent him to a home that would watch over him along with others. They are provided with more stability there and they make sure they take their prescribed medications when needed. The mentally disabled need a stable place to call home and to be taken care of and out of

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