Title: Institutional Programs
1Chapter 14
2Institutional Programs
- Managing
- Constraints of Security
- The Principle of Least Eligibility
- Classification
- The Classification Process
- Objective Classification Systems
- Rehabilitative Programs
- Psychological Programs
- Behavior Therapy
- Social Therapy
- Educational and Vocational Programs
- Substance Abuse Programs
- Religious Programs
- The Rediscovery of Correctional Rehabilitation
3Institutional Programs Cont.
- Prison Medical Services
- Prison Industry
- The Contract labor, Piece Price, and Lease
Systems - The Public Account System
- The State-Use System
- The Public Works and Ways System
- Prison Industry Today
- Prison Maintenance Programs
- Prison Recreational Programs
- Prison Programming Reconsidered
4Prison program
- any formal, structured activity that takes
prisoners out of their cells and sets them to
instrumental tasks
5Principle of least eligibility
- the doctrine that prisoners ought to receive no
goods or services in excess of those available to
people who have lived within the law
6Benefits of institutional programs
- help manage time
- improve inmates lives
- improve likelihood of parole
- reduce inmate boredom, tension, hostility
- maintain safety and security of prison
- produce goods services
- keep prison functional and operating
- offer incentives for good inmate behavior
- keep prison time from becoming dead time
75 types of prison programs
rehabilitative programs increase likelihood
inmates will lead a crime-free life upon release
recreational programs provide organized social,
physical, intellectual leisure activities
medical programs provide medical services to
inmates
industrial programs production of sellable goods
services outside prison, in free market
maintenance programs provide services essential
to upkeep operation of prison
8Factors limiting potential prison programs
- security
- need to minimize ability of inmates to obtain
weapons or contraband - also limits potential effectiveness of some
programs (e.g., group therapy) which require
meaningful inmate interaction - principle of least eligibility
- prisoners cant have it better than citizens
- e.g., elimination of inmate Pell grants (college)
- classification
- risk of escape, violence, future criminality
9classification
- a process by which prisoners are assigned to
types of custody (i.e., specific prisons, as well
as the level of supervision within a prison), and
treatment programs - classification determines
- which prison inmate is sent to
- housing assignment
- work assignment
- availability of treatment programs
- amount of good time available (e.g., Colorado)
10conflicting concerns in classification process
offender RISK
offender NEEDS
testing diagnostics to determine
factors 1.) Age 2.) Offense severity 3.) Prior
prison record dangerousness
factors batteries of tests psychiatric
evals counseling
Management tool to group inmates appropriately
Diagnostic tool to identify inmate treatment
needs
11new objective classification systems
predictive models use statistical techniques to
identify classification factors
equity-based models use explicitly defined legal
variables as classification factors
alternative systems which seek to remove
subjective judgments by classifier
- risk of escape
- risk of misconduct
- risk of future crime
- offense
- various criminal characteristics
1. each factor is assigned points. 2. total
points defines security level
12rehabilitative programs
psychological
religious
to reform offenders behavior
substance abuse
behavioral
educational vocational
social
13psychotherapy
- in general terms, all forms of treatment of the
mind, i.e., in which therapy address the
individuals thoughts and emotions in the prison
setting, these therapies are coercive in nature. - most experts agree that mental abnormalities play
an insignificant role in criminality of most
offenders.
14Myths in Corrections
- The Myth Judges should send people to prison to
get rehabilitation programs. - The Reality Rehabilitation programs offered in
the community are twice as effective at reducing
recidivism as those same programs offered in
prison. (See Figure 14.1 Programs in Prison vs.
the Community)
15coercive therapy
- treatment in which the therapist determines the
need for (and the goals of) treatment processes,
whether or not the client agrees
16group treatment
- therapy for which the setting is a group of
individuals who are seen as having the same or
similar problems or needs designed to be highly
interactive, often confrontational, as members of
the group comprise essential elements of the
therapy
17types of group therapy used in prison
reality therapy
transactional analysis
therapies focusing on thought processes
confrontational therapy (a technique)
cognitive skill building
18reality therapy
- treatment emphasizing an offenders personal
responsibility for actions and the very real
consequences of their actions - for themselves
and others - aim get individual to behave more responsibly
19confrontational therapy
- a treatment technique, usually used in a group,
that vividly brings offender face to face with
consequences of the crimes for victim society - group members encouraged to confront each others
rationalizations and manipulations - aim get offenders to give up manipulative
rationalizations and accept responsibility for
harms they caused
20transactional analysis
- treatment focusing on how a person interacts with
others, focusing on patterns that indicate
personal problems - focus is on roles people play 3 ego states
- parent judging and controlling
- adult mature, realistic, and ethical
- child playful, dependent, naughty
- aim help offenders realize their problems stem
from approaching world as an angry parent or weak
child, rather than as a responsible adult
21cognitive skill building
- a form of behavior therapy focusing on changing
the thinking reasoning patterns that accompany
criminal behavior - also called cognitive restructuring
- belief is that offenders develop antisocial
patterns of reasoning that make them believe
criminal behavior makes sense - aim to teach offenders new ways to think about
themselves and their actions
22behavior therapy
- treatment that induces new behaviors through
reinforcements (rewards punishments), role
modeling, etc. - belief crime is not so much a product of the
makeup of the individual as it is his/her
responses to problems in the environment - belief behavior is learned
- aim change persons behavior (not persons mind
or emotions) by manipulating payoffs - target of behavior change not criminality, but
problem behaviors surrounding criminal
lifestyle--verbal manipulation, rationalization,
anger control, frustration, deficient social
skills
23token economy
- a type of behavior therapy that uses payments
(such as tokens) to reinforce desirable behaviors
in an institutional environment - certain benefits (e.g., TV, privileges, free
time) must be purchased with tokens - offender receives tokens as rewards for
appropriate behavior and task completion
24social therapy milieu therapy / positive
peer culture
- treatment that attempts to make the institutional
environment supportive of prosocial attitudes
behaviors - beliefs
- offenders learn lawbreaking values behaviors in
social settings from peers to whom they attach
importance - true change occurs when offenders take
responsibility for social climate in which they
live - aims
- develop prosocial environment within prison to
help offender develop noncriminal ways of coping - make prison operations more democratic
- develop inmate culture that promotes law-abiding
lifestyle ?
25social therapy (contd)
- requirements
- institutional practices democratic, ?
bureaucratic - programs must focus on treatment, not custody
- humanitarian concerns gt institutional routines
- flexibility gt rigidity
26vocationalrehabilitation
- prison programming designed to teach inmates
cognitive vocational skills to help them find
keep employment on release - education
- gt200,000 inmates participate
- ABE (Adult Basic Education)
- GED (General Equivalency Diploma)
- college Pell grants no longer available to
prisoners - vocational training
- irrelevant skills obsolete equipment
- inmates lack skills to get keep job
- punctuality, accountability, deference to
supervisors, cordiality to co-workers, how to
find a job, do interview
27civil disabilities
- legal restrictions that prevent released felons
from voting, holding elective office, engaging in
certain professions occupations, associating
with known offenders - 6,000 occupations are licensed in ? 1 states
- barred occupations include (in some states)
- nurse, barber, beautician, real estate,
chauffeur, cashier, insurance salesman,
stenographer, worker where alcoholic beverages
are sold
28prison industry programs
public works ways system
contract labor system
teach job skills produce goods services
lease system
piece price
public account system
state use system
29contract labor system
- the type of system under which inmates labor was
sold on a contractual basis to private employers,
who provided the machinery and raw materials,
with which inmates made salable products, either
inside or outside of the institution, to be sold
on the open market
30piece price system
- a contract labor system under which a contractor
provided raw materials and agreed to purchase
goods (made by prison inmates) at a
pre-established price - tended to be extremely exploitative, as inmates
often worked in sweatshops, returning to prison
at night
31lease system
- another contract labor system which is a
variation on the piece price system in which the
contractor maintained the prisoners (often
outside of the institution), providing them with
food and clothing, in addition to providing the
raw materials for the work performed. - inmates were often required to work 12 to 16
hours at a stretch. - In some southern states, prisoners were leased to
agricultural producers to perform field labor.
32leading causes of State prisoner deaths, 2001-04
33public account system
- a labor system under which a prison bought
machinery and raw materials with which prison
inmates manufactured a salable product - 1909 Oklahoma led the way, in twine industry
- Minnesota, Wisconsin followed
- Okla. defrayed 2/3 cost of prison operations
- corruption ended the practice
34state use system
- a labor system under which goods and services
produced by prison labor inside the institution
are purchased exclusively by state agencies and
tax-supported institutions such goods never
enter the free market - currently, the most common form of prison
industry - e.g., California
35public works ways system
- a labor system under which prison inmates work on
public construction and maintenance projects
(e.g., filling potholes, building repairing
buildings bridges, working in the community on
various projects), for which the institution
receives a fee
36evolution of prison industry
- private use of inmate labor vanishes 1885-1940
- exploitative
- reminiscent of plantation slavery
- labor movement laws restrict sale of prison
goods - 1929 Hawes-Cooper Act
- bans prison-made goods from interstate commerce
- by 1940 all states ban imports of prison goods
- WWII FDR demands prison goods for war effort
- Truman revokes FDR order
- 1973 report few inmates have productive work-
National Advisory Commission on Criminal Justice
Standards and Goals - ?
37prison industry (contd)
- 1979 support for prison labor returns
- Congress lifts restrictions on sale of prison
goods - Free Venture program (LEAA)- funds 7 states
- develop industries with following requirements
- full work week for inmates
- wages based on productivity
- productivity standards from private sector
- industry-not prison-staff to hire fire inmates
- self-sufficient or profitable operations
- postrelease job placement mechanism
- 1994 16 states in Free Venture program
38substance abuse programs
- crime-drug abuse link is strong!
- 50-80 arrestees test positive for drugs
- 50-75 of them need drug treatment
- 1993 1.1 mill. offenders in drug/alcoh trtmt
- treatment difficult high failure rate
- elements of successful treatment programs
- occur in phases (residential phase 6-12 mo.)
- participants earn privileges in therapeutic
setting - use multiple treatment modalities
- residential staff community officials closely
coordinate plans for release - treatment continues after release (group therapy,
drug testing)
39Prison Blues sportswear Eastern Oregon
Correctional Institution
- produced by inmates for the general public
- inmates earn prevailing industry wage
- Prison Blues managed by Unigroup Corp.
- 85 of wage deducted for
- victim restitution
- child support
- incarceration costs
- court costs
- taxes
- 15 of wage available for
- canteen
- voluntary family support
- savings (available at release)
MADE ON THE INSIDE TO BE WORN ON THE
OUTSIDE logo of Prison Blues
http//prisonblues.com
40Prison maintenance programs
fire dept.
clerical, records
mail
electrical
Maintain operate prison
janitorial
plumbing
food service
laundry
41prison recreation programs
sports
hobby shop
reform offender behavior
journalism
weight training
drama
music