OMXUS Press

"It Wasn't That Bad" — The Science Says Otherwise

A. C. Applebee and L. N. Combe

2026

3,723 words ~14 min read 8 chapters
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Abstract

Contents

Lab Animals Get More Protection Than Prisoners 1. Space: Lab Rats vs. Prisoners (Body-Size Ratio) 2. Oversight: IACUC vs. Prison Conditions 5. Self-Reports vs. Objective Measures of Harm 6. "Jail Ain't Shit" — Masculine Performativity as Survival Strategy 7. Halden Prison (Norway) vs. US and Australian Conditions 8. Who Writes About Prison? Summary: The Architecture of Minimization

Lab Animals Get More Protection Than Prisoners

Research compiled for the justice_paradigm_shift and prevention_over_punishment theses.


1. Space: Lab Rats vs. Prisoners (Body-Size Ratio)

Lab Rat Minimum Cage Sizes

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.

US Prison Cell Sizes

Standard / Facility TypeSpace per Person (ft2)Space per Person (in2)
ACA Standard (single cell)70 ft2 total, 35 ft2 unencumbered10,080 / 5,040
Federal BOP (single-bunk standard)~65 ft2 total, 35 ft2 unencumbered9,360 / 5,040
Old US prison cells (common)48 ft2 (6x8 ft)6,912
Double-bunked federal cell~27-35 ft2 per person3,888-5,040
UN minimum recommendation43 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.

The Body-Size Ratio Calculation

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.


2. Oversight: IACUC vs. Prison Conditions

What It Takes to Confine a Lab Rat

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:

  1. Protocol submission — Detailed written justification for every animal used. Must address: scientific necessity, number of animals (statistical justification required), pain/distress classification, alternatives considered (the "3Rs": Replace, Reduce, Refine), endpoints, euthanasia methods.
  1. Committee review — Minimum 3 members required by law:
  1. Two valid review methods:
  1. Semiannual inspections — Every animal facility must be physically inspected at least twice per year. Written reports filed. Deficiencies categorized as "significant" or "minor" with mandatory correction timelines.
  1. Ongoing oversight — IACUCs can suspend protocols. Must report concerns to the Institutional Official. Noncompliance reported to OLAW (federal). Whistleblower protections exist.
  1. External layers: USDA inspections (unannounced), AAALAC accreditation (voluntary but most research institutions maintain it), OLAW oversight for NIH-funded research.

Sources: OLAW Tutorial, "The IACUC" (olaw.nih.gov); 9 CFR 2.31; PHS Policy IV.B; IACUC Guidebook, 2nd Ed., NIH/OLAW, 2002.

What It Takes to Confine a Human Being

Before a human is locked in a cell:

Factors Determining Depth of Prisonization

Clemmer identified variables that determine how deeply an individual is prisonized:

  1. Personality type prior to incarceration
  2. Length of sentence — longer sentences = deeper prisonization
  3. Relationships with people outside — stronger outside ties = resistance to prisonization
  4. Willingness to integrate with inmate groups
  5. Cell placement and proximity to other highly prisonized inmates
  6. Age at first incarceration — younger = more susceptible

Subsequent Research