Monday 21 May 2018

Politicians - The Problem and Solution

It's clear to all that something has to be done about our burgeoning prison crisis and I noticed this contribution to the Political Quarterly blog that succinctly covers how we got to where we are. Politicians caused the problem and now they have to fix it:-  

Total prison reform will take political bravery, but it's our only option

It is often said that there are no votes in prisons. This, I think, is largely true. Crime and justice has not been a prominent issue during recent elections, but that does not mean that prisons are not political.

Overtly political decisions are made about how people are expected to behave, the rules that they should abide by and what happens when they don’t. Prison is now regarded as the central column of the criminal justice system and not the ultimate sanction available to courts. But surely prison should be a scarce resource?

Soaring incarceration rates in Britain

More than 25 years ago I started working in penal reform when the dark days of the Strangeways riots were seemingly behind us. There was muted optimism following the publication of the Woolf report heralding a more humane, decent and effective prison system.

But the optimism I felt at the time was short lived. The use of prison as a sanction has been on an upward trajectory since the beginning of the twentieth century, yet since the mid-1990s since it has more than doubled with 83,216 men, women and children in prison in mid-April 2018. We have more people in prison than any other state in Western Europe, with an incarceration rate twice as high as Germany.

In the early 1990s, the Home Secretary Michael Howard’s ‘prison works’ mantra was underpinned by Tony Blair, Labour’s shadow, whose rhetoric of ‘tough on crime, tough on the causes of crime’ has become famous. This is the point at which prison numbers begin to steeply climb.

The political rhetoric and the concomitant use of prison has been shown to mirror public outcry over high profile crimes, not least the murder of James Bulger. I fear that though they cannot be ignored, such events have been co-opted by the political classes to steer the nation on a punitive path that may actually be counterproductive.

New criminal offences

Successive governments have relied on the criminal justice system to deal with a whole panoply of issues. Criminal justice legislation – and increased criminalisation – has until recently has been a regular feature of the parliamentary timetable.

In the Howard League’s evidence to the Justice Select Committee’s Inquiry into the Prison Population 2022 we suggest that between May 2010 and May 2014, 1076 new criminal offences were created in England and Wales, approximately two-thirds of which carry possible custodial penalties.

There has also been an increase in the creation of Acts of Parliament which are law-and-order related. According to our estimates, a mere 11 law-and-order Acts were passed between 1980 and 1989, with another 11 passed between 1990 and 1999. 31 such Acts were then passed between 2000 and 2009, and so far since 2010 there have been 26.

Longer sentences

However, by far the biggest impact is due to the fact that sentences have become longer. Over the past ten years, average sentence lengths, imposed by sentencers, have increased by 24 per cent across the board. For certain offence types the rise in sentence lengths is particularly notable. For example: over the past ten years, average prison sentences for fraud offences have increased by 54 per cent; average prison sentences for miscellaneous crimes against society have increased by 45 per cent; average prison sentences for criminal damage and arson have increased by 118 per cent; and average prison sentences for robbery increased by 51 per cent.

There is an over-representation of young men in from BAME backgrounds in prison, and a preponderance of poor health including high levels of mental health needs and addiction.

A further contributing factor is the use of recall (when an offender has been released on licence or parole and they breach a condition of their release). Since 1995 the number of people in prison due to recall has increased by approximately 4,000 per cent, from about 150 people on any given day in June 1995 to 6,186 people on 30 September 2017.

This statistic is indicative of the greater number of people who now spend a period on licence since the last government’s transforming rehabilitation reforms whereby short sentence prisoners are now liable to a period on licence. But this is only part of the picture as research has shown that recall occurs not because a person has reoffended, but following an administrative breach for instance being late for an appointment or any behaviour that worries an offender manager.

Should prison incapacitate or rehabilitate?

In these circumstances can we rely on prisons not just to incapacitate but to rehabilitate people? The evidence of the recent past makes this assumption at best questionable. The Chief Inspector of Prisons, Peter Clarke, characterised prisons as being as in crisis and chaotic - indeed in recent months he has condemned the leadership at Liverpool prison and nationally, for its “abject failure” to provide a safe, decent and purposeful regime. While at Nottingham prison he triggered, for the first time, the Urgent Notification Protocol because the prison was “fundamentally unsafe.”

The Prisons Inspectorate is just one voice in an ever-louder chorus from Independent Monitoring Boards, charities and academics about the state of prisons. Prisons are dirty and decrepit. And they are full. The most severely overcrowded are Leeds, Wandsworth and Durham prisons each holding around 50 per cent more prisoners than they should safely hold.

Recent research by the Howard League showers that the number of officers fell by as much as 40 per cent when the prison budgets shrank. This means that there are fewer staff to unlock doors, take prisoners to work, education, training or exercise - so they have nothing to do, little purposeful activity and so it is not surprising that tensions will rise.

And violence does appear endemic. Incidents of assault and self-injury are at their highest levels since current recording practices began in 1978. If there is no purposeful activity, prisoners may well look to other ways to make the time pass more quickly; it comes as no surprise that there is evidence of increasing drug use in prison.

The public is not being well served by prisons. A crude measure of effectiveness is reoffending rates with 44 per cent of adults being reconvicted within one year of release. For those serving sentences of less than 12 months this increases to 59 per cent. The National Audit Office estimates that reoffending by all recent ex-prisoners costs the economy between £9.5 and £13 billion annually.

Reduce the number of people in prisons

We cannot build our way out of this mess. Building more jails only causes problems to grow; it does not solve them. The most sensible way to tackle the problem is to reduce the number of people in prison instead. Why is it that other western European democracies do not lock up as many of their citizens? I do not see their communities characterised by endemic crime. And it is not just in Europe, in the US some 35 states cut their prison rates between 2008 and 2016 and reduced their crime rates.

This does not mean that we condone crime. It means we need to think differently and find solutions elsewhere. In Scotland, for instance, the focus is on investment in community sentences. And some of the best solutions are to be found in welfare and social policies like Surestart schemes and public health approaches to knife violence.

If prison has such poor outcomes, surely it is time to take a different approach? The public – whatever that amorphous word means – want to feel safe, so there needs to be clear political leadership rather than the current Justice Secretary merry-go-round.

We need the kind of political leadership that supports people to be active citizens, and diverts them away from the criminal justice system. Politicians need to be brave and look away from prison as the answer.

Anita Dockley is Research Director at the Howard League for Penal Reform

10 comments:

  1. That reads like it is from a campaigner not a criminal justice front-line practitioner or convict or victim.

    For all such folk - I suspect - the first issue is - how it feels to me within this set up.

    I am now an onlooker and I feel weary and pessimistic and defeated in not having a clue how to help instigate improvements.

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  2. It is tempting to let one's eyes glaze over when presented with yet another view of the prison crisis. I suppose you can either sit on your hands in resignation or you can keep the campaign flame burning by continuing to publicise the idiocy of current levels of imprisonment. The prison system lacks the resources to cope, prisons are becoming less civilised and the system is literally resulting in the deaths of some prisoners who would otherwise be alive if they had received the care and support, and respect for their human rights, from one of the wealthiest countries in the world. A country that is happy to spend £32m on the bread and circuses of a royal wedding while prisoners languish in dangerous and squalid conditions.

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    1. https://www.northumberlandgazette.co.uk/news/spare-cells-in-short-supply-at-packed-prison-1-9172951

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  3. I think the sword and scales that is carried by justice could easily be replaced by a copy of the Daily Mail and the Daily Mirror.
    Polititiins have used the media to stir emotions about the CJS far too much in an attempt to win votes. Even PPI adverts on TV are using the line "We'll help you get the justice you deserve." Really?
    Concepts of justice are now determined by the media, its no longer an impartial bystander making decisions on whats fair and appropriate, it HAS to pay attention to public opinion, and public opinion is dictated by the media.
    But the polititions have over done it. Promised too much and delivered too little, and now when it comes to CJS matters you're just as likely to loose votes as win them for what you feed the press.
    The prison crisis is sure to be one subject that MPs wish the media would leave alone, but it's so disgracefully broken that even the hardest right wing publications are forced to be critical of government policy.
    But when does something become so broken that it becomes unrepairable? Is the prison system past "fixing"?
    Other then taking one prison at a time and working through each one until they become operationally safe and fit for purpose I can't see how legislation or an overall policy can solve the problem.
    It's time to work out what prison is for, and what we want it to achieve because there's no point in applying expensive sticking plasters to a system so broken it should have been thrown away years ago.

    'Getafix

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    1. Well said - hence the attitude expressed by Mr Stewart seems correct - but he will need time and resources to get results and also the opportunity to legislate to lessen the number in prison.

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  4. Fine words from Mr Stewart: -

    https://www.standard.co.uk/comment/comment/what-i-felt-when-i-entered-a-prison-and-how-we-can-make-the-system-right-a3844561.html

    MY COMMENT: -

    "If Mr Stewart is genuine he will realise that prison, probation and criminal justice system staff have had their fill of “new broom” positive speaking ministers - I go back to the 1970s.

    I am not aware of one has publicly signified that she or he realises that prison is part of a very complex integrated system.

    I note, for example probation staff and interpreters, courts and lawyers are not mentioned just some of many staff groups vital to the mix.

    What about, even, prison administrators and those in health care, and we are just talking about prisons - all human life - in one institution and many tens of similar institutions up and down the land - many poorly located, poorly served by public transport, the wrong size and ill equipped for the task.

    I am sorry for my cynicism - PLEASE PROVE ME WRONG."

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    1. The outsider perhaps thinks first of a prison in terms of walls and focuses on the prison officer as guard —searching at the gate, patrolling the perimeter, or locking prisoners in cells. But — as I discovered when I became prisons minister at the beginning of this year — daily life on the blocks is more difficult to imagine. Every conversation I have had, in every prison I have visited, has only increased my respect for the job done by the officers who work in them.

      Take the wing I saw in Wormwood Scrubs recently, with more than 300 prisoners, arranged on four narrow landings. In a cell on the third landing was a chartered accountant, imprisoned for theft, writing a detailed criticism of the prison that houses him. In a nearby cell, not long before, a man had hanged himself — fuelled, perhaps, by an overdose of smuggled drugs. And in a cell on the fourth landing, a silent young man, who lived for the gym, was sharing bunkbeds with a much older man who was obsessively drawing designs for a hovercraft.

      Some of those prisoners were there for long sentences, and prison officers develop connections with them, day in, day out, for years. A hundred others were just passing through, on remand before trial, or on their way to another prison.

      One prisoner spent his mornings studying a Level 3 course in barbering. Another, who had been there for three months, thought the education programme a waste of time and spent almost all his day in his cell having — in defiance of the rules — blocked the observation panel and tried to bar the door from the inside.

      At any one time, there could be just a handful of prison officers on a landing, managing as many as 80 individuals. There are several questions a new prison officer might ask, and many have been in the service less than a year.

      How do I persuade this man to return to his cell, if he refuses? What do I do with someone who is threatening suicide? How do I deal with someone who is not violent but simply mutinous, or treat someone who might be very compliant, but who is in prison for sexually assaulting a toddler? When do I lean in, and when do I back off and call for support?

      This is a vocation that requires remarkable decisiveness and resilience. And it takes great moral authority to act as a mentor, a teacher and, in some ways, a friend to help prisoners on the path to reformation.

      It also requires physical courage. Violent assaults against prison officers — and against police officers and nurses — are rising. New psychoactive substances, most notably Spice, fuel aggression, and the criminal economy that surrounds those drugs makes violence worse. Our prison officers are, unacceptably, are victims of more than 8,000 attacks a year.

      We are responding to these attacks by introducing body-worn cameras, trialling pepper spray, installing more CCTV cameras and enhancing security searches and training on violence.

      And I was very pleased, as a minister, to recently put forward the Government case for a new Private Member’s Bill, to double the sentence for assaults on prison officers and other emergency workers. It passed unanimously and should become law this year.

      A prison officer — outnumbered 30 to one on a landing — would never attempt to fight their way into control. They know that good protection can come from listening in the right way. One of the greatest recent impacts on violence has come from our new key-worker system, where each prison officer is assigned to six particular prisoners for regular private 45-minute conversations.

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    2. The prisoners will behave more rationally if they feel that they are in a fair regime — where people are treated equally and consistently; when they will get their phone call, or their shower, or a chance to mingle with other prisoners; if they have a chance of purposeful activity like education and employment. And if they themselves feel safe.

      But equally, there is no point in endless targets exhorting the prison officer to transform offenders, change lives, and protect the public — or in volunteers offering theatre classes, and qualifications in catering, literacy and needlework — if the cells are filthy, the prisoners off their heads on drugs, and the prison officers so exposed that they can’t unlock the cell doors, or safely escort the prisoners to their activities.

      The benefits of getting these basics right was demonstrated in the recent HM Inspectorate of Prisons’ report on Feltham, a Young Offenders Institution, which has seen a huge drop in violence as a result. You could see elements of a great police officer, teacher, soldier, social worker or even priest, in the best prison officers. But they can be none of those things unless the system allows them to flourish. We are recruiting many more to boost the levels of frontline staff.

      With more than 20,000 prison officers, 84,000 prisoners, and more than 100 prisons, no minister should ever pretend to micro-manage what is happening on the landings. The kind of prisons we want will come from thousands of the right people, with the right morale and leadership; people who are trained not just at the beginning but throughout their careers, acknowledged for their skill, and made to feel part of a single elite service.

      And I believe that will include bringing the profession out of prisons and into the public eye, whether in schools or at community events, so that we can see them, proud about the service they are performing for our nation, energetic, fulfilled in their daily work and determined to create the best prison service in the world.

      Rory Stewart is Minister for Prisons

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    3. Its always *new*

      "One of the greatest recent impacts on violence has come from our new key-worker system"

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  5. Off topic, but when you have polititions like Grayling you're always going to have problems never solutions.

    http://www.cityam.com/286140/carillion-inquiry-demands-grayling-answers-accountant

    'Getafix

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