custodial sentencing

Cards (6)

  • aims of custodial sentencing
    custodial sentencing involves a convicted offender spending time in prison, hospital or young offender's institute
    1. deterrence - based on the conditioning principles
    individual deterrence - the unpleasant experience of prison is designed to put an individual off repeating the same crime again
    general deterrence - send a message to members of society that crime will not be tolerated
    2. incapacitation - ensures the offender is taken out of society which protects public from further offending
    • the need for incapacitation depends on the severity of the crime
    3. retribution - society enacting revenge by making the offender suffer
    • level of suffering should be proportionate to the severity of the crime
    4. rehabilitation - reform of the offender
    • prison should provide an opportunity e.g. develop skills and access treatments
  • psychological effects of custodial sentencing
    1. stress & depression - suicide rates and self-harm are higher in prison than in the general population
    2. institutionalisation - inability to function outside of prison having adapted to the norms and routines of prison life
    3. prisonisation - behaviours unacceptable outside prison are encouraged via socialisation into an 'inmate code
  • recidivism
    recidivism refers to reoffending. Recidivism rates in ex-prisoners tell us what extent prison acts as an effective deterrent
  • limitation
    P - negative effects of custodial sentencing
    E - Bartol (1995) said prison is 'brutal, demeaning and generally devastating.' Suicide rates in prisons (England and Wales) 9 times higher than general population
    E - the Prison Reform Trust (2014) found that 25% of women and 15% of men in prison reported symptoms of psychosis e.g. schizophrenia
    L - supports the view that oppressive prison regimes may be detrimental to psychological health which could impact on rehabilitation
    COUNTERPOINT
    - many offenders have had pre-existing psychological difficulties before prison which may explain their offending behaviour in the first place
    - suggests there may be confounding variables that influence the link between prison and its psychological effects
  • strength
    P - prison provides training and development
    E - the Vera Institute of Justice claims that offenders who take part in college education programmes are 43% less likely to reoffend following release
    E - this will improve employment opportunities on release, which reduces likelihood of reoffending
    L - suggests prison may be a worthwhile experience assuming offenders are able to access these programmes
  • limitation
    P - prison may be a school for crime
    E - incarceration with long-term offenders may give younger inmates in particular the opportunity to learn the 'tricks of the trade' from more experienced prisoners
    E - offenders may also acquire criminal contacts whilst in prison that they may follow up when they are released
    L - this form of 'education' may undermine attempts to rehabilitate prisoners and consequently may make reoffending more likely