AnnoB.J. (2001). Correctional health care: Guidelines for the management of an adequate delivery system. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, National Institute of Corrections.
2.
ColemanW. (1982). Death is a social disease: Public health and political economy in early industrial France. Madison: University of Wisconsin.
3.
IgnatieffM. (1978). A just measure of pain: The penitentiary in the Industrial Revolution, 1759-1850. New York: Pantheon Books.
4.
JacobsonM. (2005). Downsizing prisons: How to reduce crime and end mass incarceration. New York: New York University Press.
5.
KingL. (2006). Doctors, patients, and the history of correctional medicine. In M. Puisis (Ed.), Clinical practice in correctional medicine (2nd ed.). Philadelphia: Mosby Elsevier.
6.
PuisisM. (Ed.). (2006). Clinical practice in correctional medicine (2nd ed.). Philadelphia: Mosby Elsevier.
7.
RectorF.L. (1929). Health and medical service in American prisons and reformatories (National Society for Penal Information). New York: J.J. Little and Ives.
8.
RosenG. (1993). A history of public health. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
9.
TuckerS., & CadoraE. (2003). Justice reinvestment: To invest in public safety by reallocating justice dollars to refinance education, education, housing, and jobs (Ideas for an Open Society. Occasional Papers Series, 3(3)). New York: Open Society Institute.