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It’s More Expensive to Do Nothing The film, “It’s more expensive to do nothing” allows us a look at the overlooked realm of criminal integrity, the gyrating door institutionalization, the intricacies of remediation and the platforms that have been put in place to assist nonaggressive ex-offenders to thrive as independent associates of the society. The director of the documentary in conjunction with the Humane Exposures Films brings together a compelling range of voices that includes experts in the field of criminology, service providers and ex-cons. The participants help to come up with a detailed overview of how the system being applied is failing to motivate criminals and addicts so that to make them be in a position to change their behaviors towards a productive lifestyle. Therefore, this shows that the primary academic field presented in the film is the area of criminal justice since it touches on the various ways of handling offenders within the society and in prison. The secondary academic disciplines covered in the film include politics, law enforcement, law, life training, addiction training, and childhood development. Similarly, the film exposes the nonaggressive lawbreakers who have twisted their lives in a better way after effecting remediation and other set literary programs. The fields are depicted through the interviews that Susan Lankford and Alan Swyer who is the director of the film carries out on different experts under the above mentioned secondary fields. Equally, the film examines the roots of criminality, vagrancy; infatuation, infantile distress, and desertion so as to enable it copiously survey the mounting catastrophe in the integrity
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