OMXUS Press
2026
Research compiled for the justice_paradigm_shift and prevention_over_punishment theses.
The Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (8th Edition, National Research Council, 2011) — the legally binding standard for all NIH-funded research — specifies minimum floor space per rat by body weight:
| Rat Weight (g) | Min. Floor Area per Rat (in2) | Min. Floor Area per Rat (cm2) |
|---|---|---|
| 500 | >= 70 | >= 452 |
Source: Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals, 8th ed., Table 3.2. Enforced by OLAW (Office of Laboratory Animal Welfare). Chronic failure to meet these minimums is a reportable violation.
A typical adult male lab rat weighs ~250-500g (roughly 0.55-1.1 lbs) and is approximately 9-11 inches (23-28 cm) in body length.
| Standard / Facility Type | Space per Person (ft2) | Space per Person (in2) |
|---|---|---|
| ACA Standard (single cell) | 70 ft2 total, 35 ft2 unencumbered | 10,080 / 5,040 |
| Federal BOP (single-bunk standard) | ~65 ft2 total, 35 ft2 unencumbered | 9,360 / 5,040 |
| Old US prison cells (common) | 48 ft2 (6x8 ft) | 6,912 |
| Double-bunked federal cell | ~27-35 ft2 per person | 3,888-5,040 |
| UN minimum recommendation | 43 ft2 (4 m2 per person) | 6,192 |
Sources: American Correctional Association standards; Federal Bureau of Prisons Program Statement 1060.11; Bureau of Justice Statistics, Census of State and Federal Correctional Facilities.
For a 300g lab rat (~0.66 lbs, ~10 inches body length):
For a 180 lb (81.6 kg) human (~5'9" / 70 inches):
However, the rat has 24-hour access to its full cage space. The prisoner in a double-bunked cell shares that 5,040 in2 with another human being, a toilet (often unscreened), a bunk bed, and a sink. When you account for:
...the functional space ratio inverts. The rat's cage is its entire world and it can use all of it. The prisoner's usable floor space in a double-bunked old cell (48 ft2 / 2 people, minus fixtures) can drop to ~1,500-2,000 in2 of usable floor per person, yielding a ratio of roughly 8-11:1 — comparable to or less than the lab rat.
In solitary confinement / administrative segregation:
For comparison: the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals requires environmental enrichment for rats (shelters, nesting material, social housing) because single housing without enrichment is recognized as psychologically harmful to rodents. Solitary confinement provides none of this for humans.
The claim that lab rats get ~7x more space relative to body size is approximately correct when comparing functional usable space in overcrowded double-bunked cells, and becomes even more stark when you factor in enrichment requirements, social housing mandates, and time-in-space.
The Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) is mandated by federal law (Animal Welfare Act, 1966; Health Research Extension Act, 1985; PHS Policy).
Before a single rat enters a cage, the following must occur:
Sources: OLAW Tutorial, "The IACUC" (olaw.nih.gov); 9 CFR 2.31; PHS Policy IV.B; IACUC Guidebook, 2nd Ed., NIH/OLAW, 2002.
Before a human is locked in a cell:
Clemmer identified variables that determine how deeply an individual is prisonized:
When a formerly incarcerated person says the system is fair, or that prison "works," or that they "deserved it," system justification theory predicts this as a psychological coping mechanism, not an empirical evaluation:
Stockholm syndrome — where captives develop bonds with captors — was identified by Nils Bejerot after the 1973 Stockholm bank robbery. The FBI found that ~8% of hostage victims show signs of Stockholm syndrome (FBI, 1999; N>1,200 incidents). When excluding those who merely showed negative feelings toward law enforcement, 5%.
The mechanism is relevant but the framing is different for prisoners: it's not that they bond with individual guards, but that they internalize the legitimacy of the system itself — system justification rather than interpersonal bonding.
Sources: Jost, J.T. & Banaji, M.R. (1994). "The Role of Stereotyping in System-Justification." British Journal of Social Psychology, 33; Jost, J.T. (2020). A Theory of System Justification. Harvard UP; Kay, A.C. et al. (2008). "Inequality, Discrimination, and the Power of the Status Quo." JPSP, 94(4); Lerner, M.J. (1980). The Belief in a Just World. Plenum; FBI (1999). Hostage/Barricade Database System analysis.
A meta-analysis of 56 samples comprising 21,099 incarcerated people from 20 countries found:
| Population | PTSD Point Prevalence | Lifetime PTSD Prevalence |
|---|---|---|
| Incarcerated men | 6.2% | 17.8% |
| Incarcerated women | 21.1% | 40.4% |
| General population (cross-national) | — | 3.9% |
Incarcerated men are 4.6x more likely to have lifetime PTSD than the general population. Incarcerated women are 10.4x more likely.
Source: Baranyi, G., Cassidy, M., et al. (2018). "Prevalence of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Prisoners." Epidemiologic Reviews, 40(1); Fazel, S. et al. (2019). "PTSD in prison settings: A systematic review and meta-analysis." PLOS ONE, 14(9).
Half of studies used validated structured diagnostic interviews; the remainder used self-report screening questionnaires. Self-report instruments consistently produced higher prevalence estimates than clinical interviews — meaning the actual clinical rates may undercount, not overcount.
But here's the critical finding: PTSD symptoms are linked with worse post-release criminal justice outcomes (recidivism, relapse). The trauma doesn't just exist in self-reports; it predicts future behavior.
The self-report minimization is directly contradicted by every objective health measure:
| What they say | What the data shows |
|---|---|
| "It wasn't that bad" | 3.5x mortality rate post-release |
| "I can handle it" | 4.6-10.4x PTSD rates |
| "It made me stronger" | 16% increased death risk per year served |
| "I'm fine" | 16x murder risk in first year out |
| "I deserved it" | 2-year life expectancy loss per year served |
Sources: Binswanger, I.A. et al. (2007). "Release from Prison — A High Risk of Death for Former Inmates." NEJM, 356(2); Norris, S. et al. (2022). "The Effect of Incarceration on Mortality." Review of Economics and Statistics, 106(4); Baranyi et al. (2018) as above; Patterson, E.J. (2013). "The Dose-Response of Time Served." AJPH.
Nick de Viggiani (2012) — "Trying to be Something You Are Not: Masculine Performances within a Prison Setting" (Men and Masculinities, 15(3)) — ethnographic study documenting how:
Rosemary Ricciardelli, Katharina Maier, & Kelly Hannah-Moffat (2015) — "Strategic Masculinities: Vulnerabilities, Risk and the Production of Prison Masculinities" (Theoretical Criminology, 19(4)):
Lauren Maldonado (UMD thesis) — "The Prison Code's Masculine Expectations and Program Participation":
When a formerly incarcerated man says "jail ain't shit," the criminological literature identifies this as:
The minimization of prison's harm is itself evidence of prison's harm. The fact that a person cannot or will not report the damage is a direct product of the damage. Using "jail ain't shit" as evidence that prison conditions are acceptable is like using a trauma patient's dissociation as evidence they weren't traumatized.
Sources: de Viggiani, N. (2012). "Trying to be Something You Are Not." Men and Masculinities, 15(3), 271-291; Ricciardelli, R., Maier, K., & Hannah-Moffat, K. (2015). "Strategic Masculinities." Theoretical Criminology, 19(4), 491-513; Jewkes, Y. (2005). "Men Behind Bars: 'Doing' Masculinity as an Adaptation to Imprisonment." Men and Masculinities, 8(1).
| Dimension | Halden (Norway) | US (Typical Max Sec) | Australia (Typical) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cell size | ~12 m2 (~129 ft2), single occupancy | 48-54 ft2, often double-bunked | Varies; WA double-bunks single cells |
| Occupancy | Single cell (always) | Double/triple bunking common | Double bunking; triple in Victoria |
| Staff:inmate ratio (day) | 1:1 (340 staff for 252 inmates) | 1:6 to 1:12+ | Varies, generally 1:5+ |
| Staff:inmate ratio (night) | 1:2.5 | 1:30+ in some facilities | Not publicly reported |
| Time out of cell | 12 hours/day minimum | 1 hour/day (segregation); 4-8 hrs (gen pop) | Varies |
| Private bathroom | Yes (en-suite shower + toilet) | Exposed toilet in cell, shared showers | Often shared; WA: urinate in front of cellmate |
| Kitchen access | Shared kitchens, cook own meals | Cafeteria (institutional food) | Cafeteria |
| Education | Full school, recording studio | Limited; varies by facility | Available but limited |
| Weapons (guards) | Unarmed guards | Armed in towers, OC spray, tasers | Varies |
| Family contact | Up to 3 visits/week, placed near home | Limited visits, often far from home | Limited visits |
| Max sentence | 21 years (with preventive detention possible) | Life without parole; death penalty (some states) | Life (rare); typically fixed terms |
| Recidivism (2yr) | ~20% | 44% (rearrest within 1 year); 76.6% within 5 years | ~46% within 2 years (national avg) |
| Incarceration rate | 54 per 100,000 | 531 per 100,000 (2023) | ~160 per 100,000 |
| Philosophy | Rehabilitation; "every inmate is coming back to society" | Punishment, deterrence, incapacitation | Mixed; states lean punitive |
| Cost per prisoner/year | ~$129,000 USD | ~$35,000-$60,000 (varies by state) | ~$110,000-$150,000 AUD |
Norway: 20% recidivism within 2 years. 25% within 5 years. One of the lowest in the world.
United States: Bureau of Justice Statistics (2014): 76.6% of state prisoners released in 2005 were rearrested within 5 years (N=404,638 prisoners across 30 states). 55% reconvicted. 28% re-sentenced to prison.
Australia: ~46% return to prison within 2 years (Productivity Commission, Report on Government Services). Indigenous Australians: ~78% return within 2 years. Indigenous incarceration rate is the highest per capita of any group globally.
North Dakota sent corrections officials to Norway to study their model and implemented reforms. Early results showed improved staff morale, reduced violence, and better outcomes — suggesting the Norwegian model is transferable, not culturally unique.
Sources: Halden Prison data: prisonguide.co.uk; Wikipedia, "Incarceration in Norway"; NPR, "In Norway, A Prison Built on Second Chances" (2015); BJS, "2018 Update on Prisoner Recidivism" (state prisoners released 2005-2014); Australian Productivity Commission, Report on Government Services (annual); US News, "Inspired by Norway's Approach, North Dakota Reforms its Prisons" (2019).
The vast majority of published prison research is written by people who have never been incarcerated. There are no comprehensive statistics on the exact percentage, but the structural barriers tell the story:
Barriers to formerly incarcerated people becoming researchers:
The Convict Criminology movement was founded in 1997 by formerly incarcerated academics including:
The Division of Convict Criminology (DCC) is now a recognized division of the American Society of Criminology. Members include faculty at Appalachian State, Chicago State, Marquette, San Francisco State, St. Louis University, University of Canterbury (NZ), and UW-Oshkosh.
The DCC states its founding premise directly:
"The voices of the formerly-incarcerated and system-contacted have been ignored in the disciplines of criminology, criminal justice, and corrections research, policy and practices."
The people who experience prison are almost never the people who document it. The people who document it have credentials that, by definition, most formerly incarcerated people cannot obtain. This creates a research literature written almost entirely by outsiders, about insiders, using methods that privilege observable behavior over lived experience.
When a prisoner's self-report ("it wasn't that bad") is taken at face value by a researcher who has never been inside, both prisonization theory and masculine performativity research tell us that self-report is a survival artifact, not data. But the researcher — who has never needed to perform invulnerability to avoid being victimized — may not recognize this.
Sources: Richards, S.C. & Ross, J.I. (2001). "The New School of Convict Criminology." Social Justice, 28(1); concrim.org (Division of Convict Criminology); Earle, R. (2014). "Prison Research From the Inside: The Role of Convict Auto-Ethnography." Prison Service Journal; Second Chance Pell experimental program (2015-2023); FAFSA Simplification Act (2020, implemented 2023).
The claim "it wasn't that bad" is produced by at least six interlocking mechanisms:
Every objective measure — PTSD rates (4.6-10.4x general population), post-release mortality (3.5x), life expectancy loss (2 years per year served), recidivism (76.6% rearrest) — contradicts the self-report.
The self-report is not wrong. The person believes it. That's the point. That's what the system does.
Norway proves it doesn't have to: 20% recidivism, single-occupancy cells, 1:1 staffing, unarmed guards. Same humans. Different system.