Archive for the ‘Young offenders’ Category

Former Chief Inspector of Prisons on Desert Island Discs

Sunday, March 6th, 2011

Desert Island Discs with Dame Anne Owers, former Chief Inspector of Prisons, was on BBC Radio 4 earlier this month (March 2011). If you didn’t catch it you should be able to download it via this link.

In the Belly of the Beast

Sunday, August 8th, 2010

Jack Abbott’s “In the Belly of the Beast” is a harrowing read and a damning indictment of the United States’ prison system in the 1960s and 1970s.

Much seems to have changed for the better since then. However, there are a number of problems which seem to persist – both in the US and here in the UK.

One of the most pernicious of these problems is that someone with little propensity for violence before prison is likely to discover that pre-emptive violence may be the best way to protect their interests in prison. Jack Abbott highlights this tendency towards offence as the best form of defence in prison throughout “In the Belly of the Beast”.

There is much talk of prisons being universities of crime. This description may evoke images of prisoners discussing safe-cracking and money laundering techniques. Hardly an ideal outcome for society.

How much worse though is the issue that prison may turn non-violent people into aggressors? Having learned to rely on violence for survival in prison, what is to stop the hardened prisoner relying on aggression following release?

Yet another reason why prison sentences for non-violent offences are such a disaster for society, in addition to their excessive costs and – in the majority of cases – failure to rehabilitate.

RIP Boy

Sunday, May 9th, 2010

You might want to listen to the chilling radio play, “RIP Boy”, about the unprovoked fatal attack on Zahid Mubarek by his cellmate, Robert Stewart, at Feltham Young Offenders’ Institute in March 2000. It should be available for a few more days via this link.

If you miss the radio play, you can read more about this murder and why it could have been avoided by following this link to the Zahid Mubarek Trust’s website.