• Highway Signs and Prison Labor

  • Jan 6 2025
  • Length: 39 mins
  • Podcast

Highway Signs and Prison Labor

  • Summary

  • Incarcerated people grow crops, fight wildfires, and manufacture everything from prescription glasses to highway signs — often for pennies an hour. Zachary Crockett takes the next exit, in this special episode of The Economics of Everyday Things.

    • SOURCES:
      • Laura Appleman, professor of law at Willamette University.
      • Christopher Barnes, inmate at the Franklin Correctional Center.
      • Lee Blackman, general manager at Correction Enterprises.
      • Gene Hawkins, senior principal engineer at Kittelson and professor emeritus of civil engineering at Texas A&M University.
      • Renee Roach, state signing and delineation engineer for the North Carolina Department of Transportation.
      • Brian Scott, ex-inmate, former worker at the Correction Enterprises printing plant.
      • Louis Southall, warden of Franklin Correctional Center.

    • RESOURCES:
      • “Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices for Streets and Highways, 11th Edition,” by the U.S. Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration (2023).
      • “Prisoners in the U.S. Are Part of a Hidden Workforce Linked to Hundreds of Popular Food Brands,” by Robin McDowell and Margie Mason (AP News, 2024).
      • “Ex-Prisoners Face Headwinds as Job Seekers, Even as Openings Abound,” by Talmon Joseph Smith (The New York Times, 2023).
      • “Bloody Lucre: Carceral Labor and Prison Profit,” by Laura Appleman (Wisconsin Law Review, 2022).
      • “The Road to Clarity,” by Joshua Yaffa (The New York Times Magazine, 2007).
      • Correction Enterprises.

    • EXTRAS:
      • “Do People Pay Attention to Signs?” by No Stupid Questions (2022).
      • The Economics of Everyday Things.
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