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Prison
What's prison life like these days?
I mean proper prison, not YOI, as the general impression I've got, perhaps wrongly, is that it's all a bit of a holiday.
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No best answer has yet been selected by Andy008. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.My sister is a prison officer, and so is her fiance. On the one hand my sister thinks its unfair that prisoners are given free access to open university courses when she can't afford to do one - either in cash (she is not that well paid) or time (the shift system for officers is horrendous). On the other hand she accepts that if the prisoners weren't kept "amused" then her life would be much harder - there are enough incidents in prison anyway, without the prisoners being bored and frustrated.
Her fiance is much less of a liberal and feels that the Victorians had it right - 24 hour lockup, bread and water and no visitors!
I suspect it depends a lot on which wing you're working on - the prisoners are separated out not just by age or whether they are on remand / sentenced, but also by the types of crime commited and/or the length of sentence.
I would agree with londondave to a certain extent, i.e. that should be the treatment for those who have committed 'serious' crimes like rape, murder, child abuse, etc. However, since nowadays you can be imprisoned for speeding or if your child wags school, I think that's a bit harsh.
I think it varies from prison to prison, it seems that the people that have been in prison for offences such as theft, burglarly, vehicle TWOC, ABH, GBH, affryd assault, are all in with people who are in for simialr offences and they all get on and serve their time.
I think paedophiles and such like should be put in the same wing as them. It seems that the more serious your crime the more protection you get.
Consider this. If prison is so marvellous, we all might as well go out and rob a shop as there is nothing to fear. I don't think so!
I repeat (as the others don't seem to have read my first answer), I don't fancy being banged up among violent thugs and rapists of men. I think that would be punishment enough, don't you? Not to mention the loss of liberty, the overcrowding, the lack of privacy for years. Holiday camp? No thanks!
What we must remember is,that Prison is to punish AND rehabilitate(is this a paradox?)
I know a retired Prison Officer who put it in a different light.
He states:~
First offender enters Prison, receives help and education, does not reoffend.
First offender enters Prison, is put in bare cell etc (as above) reoffends,renters prison over and over again, and becomes "old lag"
How does the latter benefit society? It creates many reoffenders,and means we have to build more prisons(and overcrowded prisons at that) Ursula,at least Victorian prisoners were kept one to a cell, had a better diet than the outside world,and WERE allowed visitors.(Sorry Victorian Prison History is one of my pet subjects)
Harsh Prison Regimes(see USA) never stopped Criminals reoffending.
To finish,my Prison Officer friend said, that once someone has been in Prison twice(or more) they will always come back,why? because they are institutionalised and unable to cope wirh the outside world.(So they reoffend to get back in,regardless of harsh or not)Indeed many are unable to cope before they commit their first crime.A large proportion of the prison population is educationally subnormal.
Remember we as a society are responsible to a large extent for the criminals that we allow to become created by it!