Document Type

Conference Proceeding

Publication Title

Vanderbilt Law Review

Publication Date

5-1987

ISSN

0042-2533

Page Number

867

Keywords

prison privatization, civil rights, federal courts

Disciplines

Law | Law Enforcement and Corrections

Abstract

Prisoners often seek redress in federal courts through causes of action brought under 42 U.S.C. Section 19831 for violations of their constitutional rights caused by the overall condition of their confinement or by one specific condition or incident. Although commentators disagree over the extent to which these cases burden federal district courts, they agree that prisoner litigation constitutes a large percentage of the civil rights litigation in district courts. One of the attractions of prison privatization for state and local governments is the belief that contracting prison management to private firms will relieve the government of the burden of defending the multitude of individual and class-wide civil rights actions and the expense of complying with comprehensive and often financially burdensome court orders.'

Several reasons may explain the inmates' choice to litigate constitutional claims in federal court rather than litigating them as tort actions in state court, but two reasons predominate. First, most state legislatures have immunized state officials from suit in state court for actions arising from their official conduct.' Inmates either have no recourse in state court or are forced to proceed in a manner other than a trial before a jury.

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