Social Rehabilitation In Prison

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Social Rehabilitation in Prisons Prisons are neglecting what they are supposed to do in the first place; properly rehabilitating prisoners. With incarceration rates being as high as 714 per 100,000 people in the United States alone, this poses a serious problem to both the freed inmates and the society that they are released to (Wart et al., 2015). Major issues need to be addressed, and solutions implemented to avoid further harm from the lack of proper social rehabilitation in prison institutions. Prison institutions are lacking in basic -yet fundamental- facilities, such as mental health care and educational facilities, that are needed to hone an inmate's socialization skills before they are given their freedom (Villines, 2013). Prisoners …show more content…

Furthermore, the prisoners' exposure to constant violence, from other prisoners and from the prison staff too, can result in increased recidivism rates in the long run (Chen, 2007). That is why prisons need to invest in educational facilities that enable prisoners to find jobs once they are released, train the staff and ensure humane treatment for the prisoners, and implement medical amenities that cater to both the inmates mental health. The first solution to rehabilitating prisoners for productivity and socialization, is ensuring the availability of educational facilities in prisons. During an inmate’s incarceration, many hours are spent idling unproductively, effectively gaining nothing from all those hours wasted. Instead, prisons should incorporate educational facilities within their correctional systems, providing valuable knowledge that will open up opportunities to the inmates once they are released. In “Education and …show more content…

Contrary to popular belief, harshening prison conditions does not in fact discipline inmates. Keith Chen (2007), writes in “Do Harsher Prison Conditions Reduce Recidivism? A Discontinuity-based Approach”, that their findings in the study conducted shows that not only does inhumane treatment in prisons does not decrease criminal behavior, it even has the potential to induce it post release (Chen, 2007). The benefits of humane treatment became clear once Nordic prison systems adopted a different approach to disciplinary measures within their institutions, attending the rights of the prisoners rather than restricting them. In “Incarceration Within American and Nordic Prisons: Comparison of National and International Policies”, the article describes how by offering some leaner conditions in prisons (such as non-crowded cells and daily productive activities), the prisoners develop their socialization skills in a way that reflects to the outside world (Ward et al., 2015). Furthermore, their non-crowded cell approach meant that prisoners would not be incarcerated far away from their respective home towns, since numerous prison institutions are built all around the country, instead of piling up a large number of inmates in one place. From a sociological perspective, this nullifies a prisoner's sense of “culture shock” when they find themselves surrounded by “foreigners”

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