the effects of imprisonment Flashcards

1
Q

why do we send people to prison?

A

punishment; deterrent; public protection; rehabilitation

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2
Q

who is imprisoned in the uk?

A

houses a range of offenders- some who have committed very serious crimes- but majority of offenders are guilty of much less serious offences

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3
Q

what percent of uk prisoners are serving sentences under four years?

A

40%

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4
Q

imprisonment as punishment

A

locked up in cells; limited contact with friends and family; few personal possessions; sharing a cell; restricted movements; strict schedule and rules

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5
Q

does prison work?

A

it stops criminals commuting further offences whilst they are incarcerated, and takes away personal freedom to give ‘justice’ to society and victim

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6
Q

issues with prison

A

restrictive and unpleasant experience for inmate- including unintended features like over-crowding, boredom and threat of violence from other inmates

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7
Q

consequences of prison

A

can have negative effect on prisoners- suicide rate is 4x that of the general population, particular in the early part of their sentence.
young offenders on remand are particularly at risk

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8
Q

is prison a deterrent?

A

there is an argument that it deters an individual through behaviourist principles- being released negatively reinforces the idea that crime does not pay.

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9
Q

what are recidivism rates in the uk?

A

high- more than one in four criminals reoffends within a year. suggests it is not great as an individual deterrent.

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10
Q

when is prison a deterrent?

A

may work in the social level- vicarious negative reinforcement if seeing someone else sent to prison. but numbers are steadily increasing.

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11
Q

why do people reoffend?

A

most do not want to reoffend- but many return to situations where offending becomes likely

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12
Q

situations where offending becomes likely

A

many have lost homes, job or family. others return to situations with old friends with whom they used to get into trouble. others have mental health issues- others drug problems, possibly developed in prison.

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13
Q

what are prisoners 13x more likely to have been in?

A

care as a child

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14
Q

what are prisoners 10x more likely to have?

A

regularly truanted from school

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15
Q

what are prisoners often?

A

poorly educated, lacking basic literacy and numeracy- many below those expected of an 11-year-old

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16
Q

what do these statistics show?

A

how prisoners may struggle to fit into society and obey the law

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17
Q

what have psychologists been very involved in?

A

the design and delivery of programmes to reduce recidivism

18
Q

why are jobs important to reduce reoffending?

A

keeping offenders away from old acquaintances, providing income and allowing them to pay for accommodation.

19
Q

why else are jobs important?

A

they increase self esteem and give a sense of control

20
Q

what did gillis and nafekh study?

A

23,500 canadian offenders- some of whom had been on employment programmes prior to release

21
Q

what percent of offenders remained free during their conditional release period?

A

70% vs 55% who were not on the programmes

22
Q

what happened to those who did return to prison?

A

those on the programme went back after an average of 37 months vs 11 months for the non-programme group

23
Q

what was haney’s sample?

A

24 male volunteers who responded to a newspaper advert, paid $15 a day, and the most stable participants were selected

24
Q

what was haney’s study?

A

mock prison created in the basement of stanford university. IV- 11 guards and 10 prisoners. DV- behaviour recorded through recordings, interviews and questionnaries

25
Q

how was participant behaviour affected in haney’s study?

A

strongly affected by the role they had been given, as they internalised the environment and their roles. situation became reality rather than an experiment.

26
Q

what were 90% of the conversations in haney’s study about?

A

their situation in the prison, not the outside world

27
Q

pathology of prisoners and guards

A

took it upon themselves to engage in hostile interactions. hostile guards created an aggressive culture and basic rights became reframed as privileges. led to pathological prisoner syndrome.

28
Q

how did the prisoners experience loss of identity?

A

uniqueness reduced through uniform and ID numbers

29
Q

how did the prisoners experience arbitrary control?

A

guards exercised power in random and capricious ways- led to destabilising and helplessness. smiling at a joke may be punished depending on the guard’s mood.

30
Q

how did the prisoners experience dependency and emasculation?

A

arbitrary control created a network of dependency for the most basic needs. style of uniform provoked insults. publicly asked permission for toilet- handcuffed and blindfolded.

31
Q

how was the behaviour of participants best explained?

A

by situational, not dispositional factors. these findings should be used to inform guard training programmes.

32
Q

strategies to reduce reoffending

A

restorative justice

33
Q

what is restorative justice?

A

tries to recognise the needs of the victim of the crime- to give them peace of mind and regain a sense of control.

34
Q

what is the victim often more interested in finding out?

A

why they were targeted, rather than receiving an apology

35
Q

what does restorative justice operate alongside?

A

the criminal justice system

36
Q

why does restorative justice bring the victim and offender together?

A

so the victim is able to explain the impact of the crime to the offender

37
Q

what is the offender expected to agree to?

A

actions suggested during the process by the victim

38
Q

how is restorative justice supervised?

A

by trained officials and both groups can bring support

39
Q

how does restorative justice help?

A

reduces victim PTSD symptoms and reoffending

40
Q

what did sherman and strang find about restorative justice?

A

it works in property and violent crime