For example overcrowding is common in many countries; even developed countries like the United Kingdom (BBC News, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/2222022.stm) and the United States (Reuters, 2007, 1) have some of the most overcrowded prisons. Ireland is also one among the countries that have overcrowded prisons; however, this is restricted to some institutions like Cloverhill, Limerick, Mountjoy and so on (http://homepage.eircom.net/~calypso/prison/cond.html). The evils of overcrowding in prisons are so great that it can be called as the one of the root causes of prison problems.
An article published by John Howard Society of Alberta (1996) on the subject of overcrowding in prisons, has vividly explained three specific types of effects that result from overcrowding in prison environment. They are: 1) Increased competition for all resources like individual space, and limited “opportunities for inmates to participate in self-improvement and rehabilitative programs, such as academic, employment and vocational training” (p. 2). 2) The Negative effect of overcrowding on the behaviour of individual prisoners.
Even under normal situations some amount of stress and anxiety is caused by crowding in one place; combined with the already oppressive nature of prison setting the negative effects of crowding accentuates additional stress and anxiety (p. 3). 3) This effect is especially relevant to the management of prison environment – it relates to the ability of the staff in direct control of the prison inmates or rather inability, to fulfil the demand for increased space and sanitation and other requirements, thereby holding the potential risk of harm to individual prisoners.
According to the John Howard institute article (1996), what happens is that, there has been a “strong tendency to misclassify offenders” in the “attempt to cope with the limited space available and the resulting overcrowding” (p. 3). The statements explicated by the article are pertinent and this is substantiated by the reports and surveys conducted by independent organizations in Ireland. For example, considering this newspaper report by Ken Foxe in the Tribune that was published as recently as August 31, 2008 (http://www.tribune.ie/archive/article/2008/aug/31/state-faces-more-claims-as-mountjoy-is-forced-to-i/ ) overcrowding has given way to new subsets of problems for the state.
‘Slopping out’ is one such problem that denies the basic human right aspect of sanitation and hygiene to the inmates. Furthermore, one can understand from the report that violence is more likely to erupt in such institutions and due to this fear, management becomes even more difficult, resulting in more inhuman treatment of inmates like making them carry the pot containing human wastes and so on. Thus, it is a vicious circle, as one can understand from the report and the John Howard institute article.
Human Rights Approach to Overcrowding A close study of Andrew Coyle’s A Human Rights Approach to Prison Management (2003) shows that international conventions have strictly prohibited indignity in the treatment meted out to prisoners. Coyle (2003) cites the ‘Basic Principles for the Treatment of Prisoners, Principle 1’ to point out that all prisoners, irrespective of the crime committed, should treated with all the respect that is due to them as human beings (p.33). So then, how does one put into practice the human rights approach in order to solve overcrowding of prisons and all its allied problems in prison management?
Especially, given the fund constraints for building new jails? The answer may lie in making radical changes in the way one approaches prison management, starting from the very design of prisons. The current model of prison construction design is to explicitly confine the inmates and place the control in the hands others. This naturally promotes inequalities in an already guilt-filled, morbid environment. A more humane way to design prisons may be to construct cottage like structures that house five or six individuals with provision for some amount of privacy for each, while at simultaneously holding as many prisoners as do normal cells in a prison.
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