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GLOBAL

PRISON
TRENDS
2018

SPECIAL FOCUS
Pull-out section
The rehabilitation and
reintegration of offenders
in the era of sustainable
development
Global Prison Trends 2018 Penal Reform International The Thailand Institute of Justice
(PRI) is an independent (TIJ) is a public organisation
This document is co-published and
non-governmental organisation established by the Government
produced with financial assistance
that develops and promotes of Thailand in 2011 and officially
from the Thailand Institute of Justice
fair, effective and proportionate recognised by the United Nations
(TIJ). It is the fourth edition of Penal
responses to criminal justice Office on Drugs and Crime as
Reform International’s Global Prison
problems worldwide. the latest member of the United
Trends series.
Nations Crime Prevention and
We promote alternatives to prison that
This report was authored by Criminal Justice Programme
support the rehabilitation of offenders,
Olivia Rope and Frances Sheahan. Network Institutes in 2016.
and promote the right of detainees
Penal Reform International
to fair and humane treatment. We One of the primary objectives of
(PRI) would also like to thank
campaign for the prevention of torture the TIJ is to promote and support
Harvey Slade for his contribution
and the abolition of the death penalty, the implementation of the United
to the report, as well as Javier
and we work to ensure just and Nations Rules for the Treatment of
Sagredo and Phiset Sa-ardyen
appropriate responses to children and Women Prisoners and Non-custodial
(TIJ) for contributing to the Special
women who come into contact with Measures for Women Offenders
Focus section. The authors
the law. (the Bangkok Rules).
drew on information provided
by contributors to PRI’s expert We currently have programmes in In addition, the TIJ strives to serve as
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CONTENTS

Contents
Foreword 5
Introduction 6
1. Crime and imprisonment 7
Crime rates and the use of imprisonment 7
Prison overcrowding 8

2. Trends in the use of imprisonment 10


Pre-trial justice 10
Pre-trial detention 11
Sentencing 11
Life imprisonment 12
Death penalty 13
Drugs and imprisonment 14

3. Prison populations 16
Women 16
Children 18
Elderly people 19
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex
(LGBTI) people 20
People with disabilities 21

4. Prison management 22
Security and violence 22
Prison staff 23
Health 25
Solitary confinement 26
Contact with the outside world 27
Rehabilitation and reintegration 28
Violent extremism in prison 28
Fragile and conflict-affected states 31
Corruption in prison 32

5. Role and use of technologies 33

6. Alternatives to imprisonment 36

25 Key recommendations 39
Endnotes 41

CENTREFOLD
Special Focus 2018 (pull-out section)
The rehabilitation and reintegration
of offenders in the era of sustainable
development

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 |3
FOREWORD

[The] trend of
over-incarceration and
punishment of people
who use drugs is seen
on every continent

© Oliver de Ros, 2017

4 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
FOREWORD

Foreword

Every year, Global Prison Trends This trend of over-incarceration and we call for these commitments to
by Penal Reform International (in punishment of people who use drugs be implemented, taking account of
collaboration with the Thailand Institute is seen on every continent. The deep the fact that over-incarceration as
of Justice) provides us with a global impact it has on prison systems a result of out-of-date drug policies
view on the state of prisons. And, and on people in prison and their stalls progress on implementing the
every year, this report is, unfortunately, communities has sparked the current Sustainable Development Goals,
hardly a surprise – we read about global debate on drug policy reform. In notably for Goal 3 on health, Goal
the degrading conditions in which recent years, more and more countries 5 on gender equality, Goal 10 on
people are imprisoned, and about have been introducing amendments reducing inequality, and Goal 16 on
their growing number. Yet the level to their drug laws; for example, by peaceful societies.
of crime in most societies is constantly decriminalising the use of drugs
Drug policies need reforms, and there
decreasing. The question that remains in Norway and Colombia, and by
are two urgent ones to enact. First, we
unanswered, therefore, is why our replacing prison terms with monetary
need to accept that behaviours and
societies focus their response to fines in Ghana and Tunisia or with
actions of others that are not aligned
unlawful behaviours so often on community service, as envisaged
with our own moral perspectives do
prison? Where is the proportionality in Senegal. Other countries have
not need to be turned into criminal
in sentencing when we punish non- gone even further. Ecuador gave an
offences. Second, we need to
violent offences with lengthy prison amnesty to drug couriers and released
introduce proportionate sentencing
sentences? Is this the only response thousands of prisoners. Countries
and alternatives to imprisonment for
we can offer? that have traditionally adopted harsh
minor drug supply-related offences.
stances on drugs, such as Malaysia
The chapter on drugs and This will ease pressure on prison
and Iran, are reviewing their death
imprisonment in this report highlights systems so that they can fulfil their
penalty policies for drug offences,
that a high number of prisons in the purpose as set down in the UN Nelson
and removing people from death row.
world are overcrowded due to the Mandela Rules: to play a rehabilitative
incarceration of people for drug-related These changes and reforms are role and focus on social reintegration,
offences, in particular non-violent being discussed and implemented and to distance from the criminal
offences involving use and possession in a global environment that remains justice system those who should not
for personal use. This directly highly stigmatising, where drugs are be subject to it, including people who
reflects our contemporary addiction still considered ‘evil’ and prohibition use drugs.
to punishment and showcases the approaches prevail. They are therefore
Rt Hon Helen Clark
disproportionality of punishment in born out of a real need – the need for
relation to the offence. The use of societies to stop exposing their citizens Member of the Global Commission on
Drug Policy; Former Prime Minister of New
harsh prison sentences for people to greater risks from arrests related to
Zealand, 1999–2008; Former Administrator
who use drugs or for those who play drug use than come from the act of
of the United Nations Development
a minor role in the drug trade also using drugs. Programme (UNDP), 2009–2017.
shows the inefficiency, limitations and
The need for reforms was also
perverse effects of current drug control
highlighted at the UN General
policies. Not only are punishment
Assembly Special Session on Drugs
and incarceration becoming the sole
held in 2016. In their decisions there,
instruments used to enforce the law,
member states called for more
but also they are serving to implement
proportionate sentencing and for
moral norms which have no link with
alternatives to incarceration. At the
the reality of the offence that they are
Global Commission on Drug Policy,
supposed to punish.

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 |5
INTRODUCTION

Introduction

Global Prison Trends 2018 is the fourth All of these factors have contributed In addition to chapters on
edition in Penal Reform International’s to prison overcrowding at crisis levels, sentencing, prison populations,
annual series, published in collaboration and although some countries have prison management, the role and
with the Thailand Institute of Justice. made efforts to reduce their prison use of technologies and alternatives
The report analyses trends in criminal populations, many have resorted to to imprisonment, this year’s report
justice and the use of imprisonment unsustainable ‘quick fixes’ such as takes a closer look at pre-trial justice
and, as in previous years, these show amnesties or building new prisons. issues. Part two covers developments
that while overall crime rates around in safeguarding rights for people
Criminal justice policies affect nearly
the world have declined, the number arrested and suspected of a criminal
every aspect of the 2030 Sustainable
of people in prison on any given day offence, as well as new research on
Development Goals (SDGs), including
is rising. sentencing practices, such as the
poverty, food security, human rights,
increasing use of plea bargaining and
This continuing increase demonstrates health and well-being, education, social
life imprisonment.
that pre-trial detention is not being inclusion, gender equality, employment,
used as a last resort, as required by environmental issues, human security, By providing an overview of trends and
international standards, and prison access to justice, inclusive political challenges in penal policy and the use
remains the automatic response to processes, and governance and the of imprisonment globally, we hope that
criminal offending in most countries rule of law. Yet they have often been Global Prison Trends 2018 provides
around the globe. Minor, petty offences developed without full consideration a useful tool for policymakers and
continue to attract prison sentences, of the costs of such policies for other actors working towards fair and
including poverty-related crimes like sustainable development. effective criminal justice systems.
theft or drug use and possession.
As the Special Focus section on
Overall, sentences are becoming Alison Hannah Dr. Kittipong Kittayarak
The rehabilitation and reintegration
longer, with mandatory minimum
of offenders in the era of sustainable Executive Director Executive Director
sentencing policies restricting access
development argues, our leaders need Penal Reform Thailand Institute
to justice. With few exceptions, the International of Justice
to rethink criminal justice policy to
principle of proportionality in sentencing
overcome these enormous problems
remains aspirational.
and ensure that ‘no one is left behind’
People from minority groups and – a commitment made by states in
Indigenous communities continue to be adopting the SDGs. A system based
caught up in criminal justice systems on rehabilitation and sustainable
at disproportionate levels, which often development can see people in prison
reflects the social and economic rebuild their lives and contribute to safer
exclusion of such groups. societies, free from poverty.

6 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
CRIME AND IMPRISONMENT

PART ONE

Crime and
imprisonment

Crime rates
and the use
of imprisonment
Accurately measuring levels of crime Despite the global downward trends an impact;11 since 1998, the Court has
is not possible, although general in crime, between 2000 and 2015 delivered more than 600 judgments
trends suggest that crime rates have prison populations rose unrelentingly finding inhuman and degrading
continued downwards in recent by almost 20 per cent – a rate slightly treatment of individuals in Russia’s
years for homicide and other violent higher than the world population detention facilities.12 The Netherlands
crimes, as well as for property crimes. growth over the same period.6 saw a decrease of 46 per cent in its
Prosecutions for drug possession The number of women and girls prison population between 2006 and
offences, on the other hand, in prison worldwide increased by 2016. Again, the causes of this are
increased between 2003 and 2013, 53 per cent between 2000 and 2017.7 unclear, but contributing factors are
while drug trafficking prosecutions a renewed focus on crime prevention,
The Institute for Criminal Policy
remained stable.1 Cybercrime, such a drop in registered violent crime, and
Research estimates that there were
as internet-based theft, fraud and expansion of the scope of suspended
over 10.35 million prisoners living in
exploitation, is increasingly recognised sentences and in the use of electronic
prisons around the world in 2016,
as a major concern.2 monitoring.13 The country has such
either in pre-trial detention or having
a surplus of unused cells that it has
The crime of homicide is generally been convicted and sentenced.
rented some of its prisons to Belgium
regarded as a proxy indicator for The true figure may be in excess
and Norway.14
violent crime overall. The United of 11 million, since the data is not
Nations Office on Drugs and Crime complete and, for example, does not Although the female prison population
found an overall decline in intentional include figures from countries such as is rising, women and girls still remain a
homicide between 2009 and 2015 Eritrea, Somalia and North Korea, nor small minority, constituting 6.9 per cent
but noted marked variants across people in police detention.8 of the global prison population.15 In
different regions.3 Large increases in Africa, the proportion – at 3.4 per cent
There are diverging trends in the use
homicide were seen in South America – is much lower than elsewhere. In
of imprisonment at the regional level.
until 2014, in Northern Africa between the Americas, women and girls make
Between 2000 and 2015, the total
2009 and 2011, and in Southern Africa up 8.4 per cent of the total prison
prison population in Oceania increased
between 2011 and 2015, although in population, while in Asia the proportion
by almost 60 per cent, and in the
the latter there has been a significant is 6.7 per cent; in Europe, 6.1 per
Americas it increased by over 40 per
decline over the past 25 years. A cent; and in Oceania, 7.4 per cent.16
cent overall – 14 per cent in the US,
common feature of several countries
over 80 per cent in Central American The drivers behind the increasing rates
with high homicide rates is inequality
countries, and by 145 per cent in of imprisonment globally are many and
in income distribution.4
South American countries.9 varied, and can be linked to changes in
Globally, men are overrepresented as criminal justice policies and practices
In Europe, by contrast, the use of
both victims and perpetrators when it such as mandatory sentencing and
imprisonment decreased by 21 per
comes to homicide. However, women stringent bail conditions, as well as
cent in the same period.10 Russia’s
make up the majority of victims of social, cultural and economic factors
prison population decline is striking
homicide by intimate partners and such as levels of inequality, substance
(a 37 per cent reduction between 2000
family members, and there is limited abuse, unemployment and social and
and 2015) and the explanation for this
regional differentiation in this pattern.5 community cohesion. Any relationship
is not clear. One study suggested that
between rates of imprisonment
the jurisprudence of the European
and levels of criminal activity
Court of Human Rights might have had
remains contested.

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 |7
CRIME AND IMPRISONMENT

Some countries continue to have a studies that examined this link, and RECOMMENDATION 01
‘tough on crime’ approach founded concluded that ‘the crux of the matter States should introduce a range
on a belief that higher rates of is that tougher sentences hardly deter of law and policy changes to
imprisonment and longer sentences crime, and that while imprisoning reduce rates of imprisonment,
will act as a deterrent and incapacitate people temporarily stops them from such as crime prevention
offenders from committing crime committing crime outside prison walls, measures, the expansion
whilst in prison. However, there is it also tends to increase their criminality of alternative measures,
clear evidence that tougher sentences after release. As a result, “tough on and a renewed focus on
of imprisonment do not in fact deter crime” initiatives can reduce crime rehabilitation in both prisons
offenders from committing crime. A in the short run but cause off-setting and community settings.
2017 report by the Open Philanthropy harm in the long run’.17
Project reviewed 35 international

Prison
overcrowding
The growth of the world prison overcrowding. While there is a great Justice Ministry admitted to a ‘severe’
population has exceeded the rate of deal of evidence that the mental health overcrowding problem.29 The extra
general population growth since 2000, of prisoners is affected by prison prisons will increase the total prison
and, in many countries, this increase overcrowding, including from the UN,22 capacity by 137,000 beds.30 In
has led to more overcrowded prisons. a new academic study that assessed Slovakia, a new prison is planned to
Data suggests that the number of 4,000 prison suicides in 24 countries house a further 832 prisoners,31 and
prisoners exceeds official prison found no link between suicides and Nigeria announced that six ‘ultra-
capacity in at least 120 countries.18 overcrowding.23 modern’ prisons will be opened
This is an underestimate, as some across the country.32 A European
The long-term solution to prison
systems base their calculations on Parliament report which deplored
overcrowding lies in the reform of
minimal space per prisoner. Prison prison overcrowding in EU member
policies and laws and the use of
overcrowding is largely a consequence states noted that ‘increasing prison
alternatives to imprisonment, as
of dysfunctional criminal justice capacity is not the sole solution to
required by the UN Tokyo Rules.24
systems and punitive responses overcrowding, as the prison population
However, more immediate responses,
to crime. (See Pre-trial detention, tends to rise at the same rate as
such as amnesties and pardons,
page 11; Sentencing, page 11). increases in prison capacity’.33
continue to be implemented.
Overcrowding also occurs in Amnesties were recently announced The use of non-custodial measures at
transportation of detainees; for in Macedonia and Kuwait, and, in the pre-trial stage and post-conviction
instance, a recent report by Amnesty The Gambia, more than 250 prisoners is increasingly understood to be an
International found that prisoners in received a pardon.25 In Kenya, the effective way to reduce overcrowding.
Russia can spend up to 60 hours in a President directed the release of Several countries struggling with
space of just 0.29 square metres while petty offenders, citing huge costs as overstretched prisons took steps
being transferred between facilities.19 the reason for decongestion, and a to keep people out of prison. For
decongestion initiative began in 2017 example, following a European Court
A small number of countries have
in Nigeria, led by a newly established of Human Rights ruling that it take
seen a drop in their prison populations
national committee on prison reform.26 steps to address prison overcrowding,
in recent years, including Russia
Romania planned to introduce early
and Mexico.20 But the general trend While amnesties and pardons produce
release and electronic monitoring
of over-incarceration and prison short-term relief, they are not a
for certain categories of prisoners.34
overcrowding continues. sustainable solution and can also
(See Pre-trial detention, page 11;
erode public confidence in the criminal
A report issued by the UN High Alternatives to imprisonment, page
justice system. In the Czech Republic,
Commissioner for Human Rights 36; and for electronic monitoring,
approximately 2,000 of the 6,500
in 201721 detailed the causes and page 33).
people released in a 2013 amnesty
effects of over-incarceration and
subsequently returned to prison.27 In
prison overcrowding, citing violence RECOMMENDATION 02
Burundi, a pardon to release around
and abuse as ‘by-products’ of the
a third of the prison population in early Strategies to address prison
latter. It also pointed out links between
2017 was criticised as only making overcrowding should focus on
overcrowding and inadequate
space for political prisoners.28 crime prevention, expanding
healthcare and facilities for training,
the use of alternatives to
as well as a lack of opportunity to Some countries look to the
imprisonment and social
enjoy the right to freedom of religion construction of new prisons to
interventions that promote
or belief. The report detailed how reduce overcrowding. Turkey has
sustainable development and
vulnerable groups are impacted announced plans to build 228 prisons
reduce poverty and inequality.
differently and more severely by over the next five years, after its
(SDGs 1, 10 and 16)

8 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
CRIME AND IMPRISONMENT

The long-term
solution to prison
overcrowding
lies in the reform
of policies and
laws and the use
of alternatives to
imprisonment

© Thailand Institute of Justice, 2017

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 |9
TRENDS IN THE USE OF IMPRISONMENT

PART TWO

Trends in
the use of
imprisonment

Pre-trial justice
Everyone has rights, from the moment Congress has been considering work has commenced to develop a
they first come into contact with the legislation that would make custody set of universal standards for non-
criminal justice system. These include hearings mandatory nationwide.38 coercive interviewing and procedural
protection from the unnecessary safeguards.43 The Convention against
Some other positive measures have
use of force by the police, from Torture Initiative has published a
been adopted to protect suspects,
summary or arbitrary arrest, and from training tool on the method,44 and the
such as in Japan, where a revised law
incommunicado detention. People UN has announced the publication of
requires mandatory video recording
have the right to be told of the reason a Manual on Investigative Interviewing
of interrogations with suspects to
for their arrest, have access to legal for UN police officers.45
be implemented by June 2019.39
representation and medical care, and
A pilot project in Fiji to introduce Investigative interviewing has its origins
to be charged and brought promptly
video recording of police interviews in the ‘PEACE’ model developed in
before a judge.35
was extended for another year.40 England and Wales in the 1990s,46
Police detention and investigation In Paraguay, it is now mandatory which has since influenced other law
can be a time of great vulnerability to use detention registries in all enforcement agencies, including in
for detainees, with many of these police stations, which can improve Norway, New Zealand and China.47
rights being flouted. For instance, transparency.41
in India state-funded legal aid is not RECOMMENDATION 03
Abusive and coercive interrogation
always provided at the time of arrest
practices have long been criticised, States should respect, protect
or when the accused person is first
not least because they are ineffective and fulfil the full range of
brought before a magistrate, which
in achieving the aim of fact-finding human rights and procedural
discriminates against people who
to solve crimes. The UN High safeguards guaranteed for
cannot afford private lawyers in the
Commissioner for Human Rights people arrested. To prevent
critical pre-charge stage.36 Research
reiterated recently that coercive torture or ill-treatment of
from Mexico found that 83 per cent
methods, including the use of torture, suspects, investigative
of Indigenous prisoners were not
are unreliable, counterproductive and interviewing that is non-
shown an arrest warrant and 77 per
‘deeply wrong’.42 In 2016, a report coercive should be adopted.
cent did not understand why they
by the UN Special Rapporteur on (SDG 16)
were being detained, and there were
torture urged states to develop an
only 24 public defenders who spoke
international protocol on non-coercive
Indigenous languages available for
interviewing methods to counter
7,433 Indigenous suspects.37 In Brazil,
widespread patterns of torture and
judges in only about 40 per cent of
ill-treatment to extract confessions
jurisdictions see detainees promptly
of guilt. This has led anti-torture
after arrest at ‘custody hearings’
advocates to promote ‘investigative
(where rulings are made on pre-trial
interviewing’ – a non-coercive method
detention), and many wait months to
of interviewing criminal suspects, and
see a judge. In response, the Brazilian

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TRENDS IN THE USE OF IMPRISONMENT

Pre-trial
detention
Pre-trial detention is one of the by courts, which particularly impacts Other measures to address the
main causes of over-incarceration on poor people caught up in criminal excessive use of pre-trial detention
and overcrowding and it remains justice systems. The problem is included legal limits on its length and
an enormous challenge for prison well-documented in the US, where, application. For example, in Bolivia,
systems. Around 30 per cent of in the state of Hawaii during the first where 68 per cent of the prison
prison populations have not been half of 2017, almost half of the jail population are in pre-trial detention,
convicted. While global pre-trial rates population were in pre-trial detention reforms are being considered to
have decreased slightly over the past because bail amounts were set at shorten the maximum time of pre-trial
10 years, in some countries over excessive levels; the average amount detention and limit the number of
60 per cent of people in prison are in for the lowest-level felony was over cases that it can be applied to.56 In
pre-trial detention.48 The total number USD$20,000 in Honolulu.52 Steps were Colombia, a new law came into effect
and percentage of pre-trial detainees taken in several US states to reform in response to a Supreme Court ruling
is an indicator of access to justice bail systems to address the issue, to expedite low-level criminal cases
under Goal 16 of the Sustainable including in Connecticut, Alabama where the suspects are in pre-trial
Development Goals.49 and recently in New York City, where detention.57 The Egyptian Parliament
cash bail for non-felony cases is to is currently drafting a bill to put a
A lack of access to legal representation
be abolished.53 six-month ceiling on pre-trial detention,
is a major factor contributing to
although there is some scepticism
high rates of pre-trial detention. Efforts to reduce levels of pre-trial
as to whether it would be fully
For example, a survey in Nigeria detention have been seen in a number
implemented.58
found that 56 per cent of pre-trial of countries. In Thailand, a pilot
detainees did not have active legal project across 12 courts successfully
representation primarily due to lack introduced flight-risk assessment RECOMMENDATION 04
of funds to engage a lawyer.50 Barriers when determining if pre-trial detention Pre-trial detention should
to appearing in court are another is necessary. Around 66,000 people only be used as a means of
factor, such as in India, where there are imprisoned each year in Thailand last resort, and decisions to
was a reported 82,334 cases across because they do not have enough detain should be based on the
154 prisons in a six-month period cash or assets to post bail before and presumption of innocence and
where pre-trial detainees did not during their trials.54 In Liberia, where the principles of necessity and
appear in court for their trial, due it is estimated that 69 per cent of proportionality. Monetary bail
to a shortage of police escorts.51 prisoners are in pre-trial detention, a policies should be reviewed to
special judiciary task force has been ensure they do not discriminate
High rates of pre-trial detention
established to review cases.55 against poor people.
are also a result of unaffordable
(SDGs 1, 10 and 16)
amounts of monetary bail being set

Sentencing
Levels of severity in sentencing vary over 18 years in 2012.60 (See Life burglary revealed that offenders are
considerably between countries, and imprisonment, page 12). In England far less likely to receive a custodial
identifying trends in the proportionality and Wales,141 offenders had their sentence in Limerick than in Dublin.62
and length of sentences is not sentences increased in 2016 as
Elsewhere there have been positive
straightforward. However, available a result of a referral scheme where
sentencing reforms. In New Zealand,
data suggests that prison sentences anyone can ask the Attorney General
a new government set out plans
are getting longer generally, particularly to consider whether a sentence
to remove the ‘three strikes’ law
for serious offences. For example, should be referred for review at the
introduced in 2010, which removed
whilst the number of custodial Court of Appeal for being unduly
the discretion of a judge when
prison sentences handed down by lenient. The scheme is only possible
sentencing a third offence, requiring
courts in Finland decreased overall for more serious offences, and
the maximum prison sentence
by 42 per cent between 2004 in 2017 was extended to include
available in law, without the possibility
and 2016, the average duration of 19 terrorism-related offences.61
of parole.63 The Nepalese Parliament
life-term sentences rose from just over
Wide variation has also been observed passed a Bill that permits courts to
10 years in the 1990s to 14.5 years
in sentencing practice between courts sentence prisoners to ‘open jails’ and,
in 2016.59 A similar trend was seen
and individual judges; for example, in if sentenced to less than two months,
in Scotland, where the average tariff
Ireland, where there are no sentencing the court may order them to serve their
for those receiving a life sentence
guidelines, analysis of sentencing for sentence in a rehabilitation centre.64
increased from 10 years in 2000 to

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 | 11
TRENDS IN THE USE OF IMPRISONMENT

In the US, the Sentencing Commission 95 per cent of criminal cases are now to them during a trial. Also, innocent
considered an amendment to the resolved through plea bargains, with people can be persuaded to plead
federal sentencing guidelines to little regulation (there are no legal guilty; easier convictions can
increase the availability of ‘alternative limits on what can be negotiated encourage over-criminalisation and
to incarceration’ sentences.65 between individual prosecutors and drive harsher sentences; there can be
defendants). In Australia, England an inequality between the negotiating
A significant trend in relation to
and Russia, more than 60 per partners and a lack of transparency
sentencing is a growth in plea
cent of cases are resolved with where ‘deals’ are done by prosecutors
bargaining or trial waiver systems. Plea
plea bargains.67 behind closed doors; and public trust
bargains are a negotiated process by
in justice can be undermined.69
which the prosecution puts forward Supporters of plea bargaining assert
reduced charges or requests a lighter that it can reduce court waiting times,
sentence, and in return a defendant help to reduce pre-trial detention, save RECOMMENDATION 05
pleads guilty or incriminates others. money, and can protect vulnerable Sentencing practice should be
victims from the ordeal of testifying guided by international law,
A 2017 study on 90 countries by the
in trial. In India, for instance, it was including the UN Tokyo and
NGO Fair Trials found that there was a
introduced explicitly to address Bangkok Rules, and should
300 per cent increase in plea bargains
overcrowding.68 However, without be based on the principle of
worldwide since 1990.66 For example,
adequate procedural safeguards, proportionality. Plea bargaining
in Georgia, where plea bargaining was
there are considerable concerns systems should be fully
introduced in 2004, the share rose
about its use and expansion, not least regulated to ensure access to
from 13 per cent in 2005 to 88 per
that defendants lack the procedural justice is preserved and rights
cent in 2012. The US is the jurisdiction
safeguards that should be available of suspects are upheld. (SDG 16)
with the most extensive use – over

Life
imprisonment
The actual time served when someone Some countries impose mandatory Rights Council urging its prohibition.75
is sentenced to ‘life imprisonment’ sentences, and in the US, for instance, The only country to allow LWOP
varies from country to country. In some ‘three strikes’ legislation insists on sentences for crimes committed by
jurisdictions, life sentences are handed automatic life sentences after a third children is the US.76 Although a 2016
down for a determinate number of offence. The gradual abolition of the Supreme Court ruling required the
years, after which the prisoner is death penalty is another cause, with re-sentencing or consideration of
released with or without conditions. life imprisonment replacing capital parole for people currently serving
In others, a prisoner must serve a punishment as the ultimate penalty. life sentences for offences they
minimum number of years, at the end committed as children, states have
Where disaggregated data is available,
of which they will be considered for been slow to do so and little progress
it suggests that women comprise just
release. Life without parole sentences has been made.77 Twenty-five states
under 4 per cent of life-sentenced
(LWOP) are where the prisoner has and Washington, D.C. now ban the
prisoners.71 Although they constitute
no possibility of having the sentence sentence, up from five states just five
a minority, analysis from the US
reviewed, so will be imprisoned until years ago.78 In four other states it
found that the rise in life sentences
his or her death. exists in law, but is never imposed in
for women surpassed that for men.
practice.79 (See Children, page 18).
It is now estimated that almost A possible reason offered – given
half a million people are serving life the relatively stable and low level Conditions for life-sentenced prisoners
sentences around the world, according of women’s involvement in violent continue to fall below minimum
to a ground-breaking study that will crime which life sentences are usually standards, and restrictions on access
be published in 2018.70 Data from imposed for – was that men may be to rehabilitation programmes and
the study shows that there has been benefitting from parole release more contact with the outside world are
a steady growth in the number of frequently than women.72 Research common. Reports show that several
life-sentenced prisoners around the published in 2017 found that for countries systematically handcuff
world over recent decades. Out of a women, serving life sentences was and/or strip-search life-sentenced
total of 216 countries and territories, ‘more acutely painful and problematic prisoners whenever they leave their
183 allow for life imprisonment in than [for] their more numerous male cells, regardless of actual risk.80
law, often as the ultimate penalty for counterparts’.73 Much of this was This is the case in Kyrgyzstan for
the most serious crimes. Sixty-five because of their role as carers, and example, although a new facility
countries impose LWOP sentences. because of previous victimisation. has been opened to accommodate
prisoners serving sentences longer
Explanations for the rise in life Data from 2015 showed that 73
than 20 years, where prisoners will be
imprisonment include ‘tough on crime’ countries allow life sentences for
permitted to move inside the facility
policies and long sentences handed offences committed while under the
without escorts or handcuffs.81
down as part of punitive drug policies. age of 18,74 despite the UN Human

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TRENDS IN THE USE OF IMPRISONMENT

Although life imprisonment is a major Court encouraged the government no genuine prospects of release
contributor to the problem of prison to avoid LWOP by introducing violated the prohibition of inhuman
overcrowding, it continues to be non-mandatory life sentences with or degrading treatment.85
excluded from discussions on penal the possibility of release, instead
reform. For instance, a 2017 study in of capital punishment.83 In another RECOMMENDATION 06
the US found that although the number significant judgment, the Supreme
States should reduce the use
of people serving life sentences in Court of Namibia ruled in early 2018
of life imprisonment, taking
the country’s prisons is at an all-time that very long fixed-term sentences,
account of the principle
high (representing one in seven which in practice would keep
of proportionality and the
people in prison), the ‘evaluation of offenders in prison for longer than
negative impact of such
the appropriateness of lifelong prison life sentences, are unconstitutional,
sentences. Life sentences
sentences is typically either omitted as they violate the right to dignity.84
without any possibility of
from policy discussions or deliberately These judgments follow the European
parole should be abolished.
excluded from reforms’.82 Court of Human Rights’ (ECtHR) ‘right
Conditions for life-sentenced
to hope’ jurisprudence. In its most
There have been efforts by courts prisoners should adhere to the
recent judgment on the issue in May
to limit the application of life minimum standards set out
2017, the ECtHR ruled that whole-life
imprisonment. In Kenya, the Supreme in the Nelson Mandela Rules.
sentences in Lithuania offering
(SDGs 8, 10 and 16)

Death penalty
In general, the use of the death Political Rights, committing to abolish offences.96 New laws proposed in
penalty is decreasing globally and the death penalty, and announced a Indonesia would see a 10-year stay
the trend towards abolition of the moratorium in early 2018.90 on executions.97
death penalty continues. Following
There are at least 33 countries that In the US, death sentences and
a spike in executions in 2015, global
allow for the death penalty for drug executions remained at a historic low,
figures show that the number of
offences in law, and at least nine with only eight states carrying out
people executed fell by 37 per cent
countries retain it as a mandatory executions in 2017.98 The Supreme
in 2016; Amnesty International
sanction (although three of these Court enforced the prohibition of the
recorded that at least 1,032 people
countries are abolitionist in practice). execution of intellectually disabled
were executed in 2016, compared
Excluding China where statistics defendants, by ruling against the
to at least 1,634 in 2015.86 However,
are unreliable, at least 1,320 people state of Texas’ outdated methods
it also recorded an increase in the
are known to have been executed of assessing intellectual disabilities
number of death sentences handed
for drug-related offences between – which were found to be based on
down globally in 2016 (which totalled
January 2015 and December 2017, ‘stereotypes, fears, or myths’.99
3,117), representing the highest total
although the number of executions has
ever recorded.87 However, a few countries that have
steadily declined from 718 in 2015 to
retained the death penalty in law
As of March 2018, 141 countries have 280 in 2017.91
considered reintroducing its use,
abolished the death penalty completely
There were positive signs of countries including Israel and the Philippines.100
in law or practice, the latter meaning
moving towards abolition over The President of Turkey spoke in
countries that have not had any
the past year, including in Kenya favour of reintroducing the death
executions during the past 10 years
where mandatory death sentences penalty ahead of a referendum to
and which are believed to have a
were declared unconstitutional by extend his political powers, and there
policy or established practice of not
the Supreme Court in December are plans to resume use of the death
carrying out executions. There are
2017.92 In Thailand, the government penalty in the Maldives after a 60-year
now 105 countries that have abolished
announced moves to remove moratorium, which have attracted
the death penalty for all crimes and
mandatory death sentences for international condemnation.101
a further seven for ordinary crimes
certain offences.93 In early 2018, Iran
(i.e. laws only permit the death penalty There was increasing concern about
abolished capital punishment for
for exceptional crimes such as crimes the imposition of the death penalty
some drug trafficking offences, which
under military law or crimes committed on foreign nationals in Iraq, including
affects 5,000 prisoners on death
in exceptional circumstances).88 During nationals from regions such as Central
row;94 Iran accounted for nearly 90
2017, Mongolia abolished the death Asia and Europe. Many have been
per cent of all reported drug-related
penalty for all crimes in a new criminal prosecuted for terrorism-related
executions between January 2015 and
code, and Guatemala abolished the offences such as membership of
December 2017, with at least 1,176
death penalty for ordinary crimes.89 or providing support to so-called
executions carried out in that period.95
Furthermore, The Gambia signed Islamic State (IS), as well as for
Malaysia moved to remove mandatory
the Second Optional Protocol to the killings and other acts enshrined in
death sentences for drug trafficking
International Covenant on Civil and counterterrorism legislation that carry
the death penalty.102

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TRENDS IN THE USE OF IMPRISONMENT

In many jurisdictions, people on death their time on death row, which, on RECOMMENDATION 07
row live in conditions that fall well average, lasts more than a decade.103 States that retain the death
below minimum standards, which Harsh physical conditions which penalty should move towards
in many cases amounts to inhuman ‘almost act as a separate sentence’ abolition and establish a
or degrading treatment. Mandatory for death row prisoners in India are moratorium as a first step.
solitary confinement and total bans on detailed in a 2016 study, which found States that have abolished the
‘open’ or ‘contact’ visits are common, ‘extremely cramped spaces, cells with death penalty should support
and are in violation of the UN Standard very little light and air, unacceptable the abolition movement
Minimum Rules for the Treatment of standards of hygiene, abysmal quality politically and financially.
Prisoners (the Nelson Mandela Rules). of food in flagrant violation of prison Conditions for prisoners on
One 2017 study explained that every manuals, poor standards of medical death row must meet minimum
prisoner on death row in Texas, US, services and almost non-existent standards. (SDGs 3, 10 and 16)
spent about 23 hours a day in an mental health services’.104
8-by-12-foot cell for the duration of

Drugs and
imprisonment
The enforcement of punitive drug become prominent in the debate is law that had imposed a mandatory
laws continues to have significant how to measure the impact of drug prison sentence for narcotics use
implications for the use and policies on human rights, public health or possession, giving judges new
practice of imprisonment. Harsh and development, which isn’t captured discretion to take account of mitigating
criminal justice responses to drugs in traditional metrics of drug policy.109 factors.115 In Thailand, where 73 per
are a major contributor to prison cent of prisoners are detained on
The large majority of drug-related
overcrowding, and the ‘war on drugs’ drug-related offences,116 reforms
offences that people in prison are
persists in some countries with have reduced the overall length of
charged with or convicted of are minor.
disastrous consequences. sentences for drug offences and
According to available UN data, 83 per
further relaxation of the country’s drug
The debate at the international level cent of drug offences recorded by
laws are anticipated in 2018 through
on how to address the world drug law enforcement and criminal justice
the proposed Narcotics Control Bill.117
problem is ongoing. 2019 marks systems are possession offences.110
Ghana will become the first African
the end of the 10-year-long 2009 To reduce the use of imprisonment
country to decriminalise the personal
UN Political Declaration and Plan of for minor drug offences, all UN
possession and use of illicit drugs
Action105 on drug policy, which aimed member states at the 2016 UNGASS
if the progressive Narcotics Control
at enhancing international cooperation committed to the ‘development,
Commission Bill currently under
and reducing the supply and demand adoption and implementation…of
consideration is adopted.118
for illicit drugs. There is growing alternative or additional measures with
agreement that the 2009 goals are not regard to conviction or punishment’ There was an expansion in the use
only unattainable, but policies adopted for minor drug offences.111 of ‘drug courts’119 – designed to offer
under them have led to significant drug treatment programmes under
Many governments have taken steps
harm. UN bodies, international leaders judicial supervision – particularly in
towards a less punitive approach to
and an increasing number of member Latin America, which follow a model
drug cultivation and possession for
states have rejected such a punitive from the US where there are around
use. New reforms have been proposed
approach to drug policy.106 This 3,100 drug courts.120 However, there
or adopted over the past year –
broken consensus on the direction of are significant concerns about this
including decriminalising cannabis or
international drug policy was reflected expansion, including from the Inter-
reducing sentences for minor offences
in the lead-up to and outcome of the American Commission on Human
– in countries such as France, Georgia,
UN General Assembly Special Session Rights (IACHR). The Commission
Norway and Canada, and in several
(UNGASS) on drugs in 2016.107 has criticised the lack of available
US states.112
data and monitoring mechanisms
The UN Human Rights Council
In Myanmar, where approximately demonstrating effectiveness and noted
adopted a Resolution on drugs
48 per cent of the prison population that some drug courts have been used
and human rights in March 2018,
are held under drug-related to criminalise non-problematic drug
reaffirming the role of human rights
offences,113 the National Narcotic Drug possession or use, rather than the
in the international drug policy
Control Policy was issued in February stated intention of providing a public
debate and requesting a report on
2018 after years of deliberations, health alternative.121
the implementation of the UNGASS
shifting policy towards a less punitive
Outcome Document with regards to
approach.114 Furthermore, the
human rights.108 One issue that has
Tunisian Parliament amended a drug

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TRENDS IN THE USE OF IMPRISONMENT

Conversely, many countries remain marijuana on 1 January 2018.128 Drug use in prison remains prevalent.
dedicated to a prohibitionist and The IACHR expressed concern that The UN reported that 20 per cent
punitive approach adopted as part minor drug-related offences are of the world’s prison population use
of the so-called ‘war on drugs’; this characterised as ‘grave offences’ in a drugs, compared to an estimated
has serious consequences, including number of states, leading to automatic 5.3 per cent in the community.
the spread of infectious diseases, pre-trial detention.129 Cannabis is the most common
ever-increasing prison populations, drug used in prison, followed by
Women are disproportionately affected
and discrimination against minorities heroin.132 Furthermore, the use of
by harsh drug laws. In the Americas
and Indigenous populations as well new psychoactive substances by
and Asia, significant increases in
as women.122 prisoners has become common in
the female prison population are
English prisons, as well as in the
In the Philippines, President Rodrigo largely due to an increase in drug
US and in police detention centres
Duterte continued to wage a war on prosecutions. In a 2017 report, the
in New Zealand.133 Harm reduction
drugs which has led to more than IACHR details how pre-trial detention
measures, a key measure to
an estimated 12,000 people being for drug-related offences has an
preventing harms associated with drug
killed since it began in mid-2016.123 excessive impact on women and their
use – including the transmission of
In February 2018, the International families. It notes the lack of gender
HIV – are rarely provided in prisons.134
Criminal Court announced it would awareness in drug policies, which do
(See Health, page 25).
be investigating the ‘extra-judicial not take into account that women
killings in the course of police anti-drug usually participate at a low level of the
operations’.124 A month later, the drug business chain and trafficking, RECOMMENDATION 08
President responded by announcing and that their imprisonment has a States should review their
the country would withdraw from significantly negative impact on their drug policies in order to adopt
the International Criminal Court’s children.130 (See Women, page 16). evidence-based policies that
Rome Statute.125 include decriminalisation of
In some countries drug users are
minor offences, proportionality
US President Donald Trump detained in compulsory ‘drug
of sentencing, and non-custodial
responded to the country’s opioid rehabilitation centres’ without
alternatives to imprisonment.
crisis, which has seen more than two oversight, and there are reports of
Treatment as an alternative
million people become dependent on serious human rights violations. For
to imprisonment must be
prescription pain relief drugs,126 by instance, in Vietnam there are up to
voluntary and human-rights
signalling an intent to re-escalate the 11,317 people held in such centres
compliant. Metrics to measure
‘war on drugs’.127 Furthermore, early in Ho Chi Minh City alone, including
the outcomes of drug policies
2018 saw the US Attorney General children. Detainees are forced to
should include their impact
rollback a policy legalising marijuana perform menial work and violations of
on human rights, health and
by giving federal prosecutors discretion rules or failure to meet work quotas are
development. (SDGs 3, 5 and 16)
on enforcing a federal prohibition punished by beatings and deprivation
– causing confusion in states of food and water.131
such as California, which legalised

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PRISON POPULATIONS

PART THREE

Prison
populations
Of the approximately 10.35 million As a result, minorities are more likely In several countries, people from
people held in penal facilities globally, to be arrested, prosecuted and Indigenous communities are also
the majority are adult men135 who imprisoned for longer terms than disproportionately represented in
tend to be from impoverished members of the majority population criminal justice systems, with high
backgrounds.136 in a significant number of countries.137 imprisonment rates.139
For example, in Denmark, there are
People from national, ethnic, religious Foreign national prisoners (FNPs) make
plans to double the penalties for
or linguistic minority groups continue up a quarter of prison populations
crimes committed in deprived ‘ghetto’
to be discriminated against in many in 39 countries. In the United Arab
areas, where immigrant numbers are
criminal justice systems. Emirates, Qatar and Switzerland, FNPs
above-average.138
constitute over 70 per cent of the
prison population.140

Women
Women and girls remain a minority Sharp rises in female prison numbers Women from Indigenous communities
in prison populations, constituting across the Americas are also a result and ethnic minorities face significant
around 7 per cent of the global prison of harsh drug laws144 that continue disadvantages in the criminal justice
population. In November 2017, new to impact women disproportionately, system. For instance, Aboriginal and
data published showed that there as reported on by the Inter-American Torres Strait Islander women comprise
are now more than 714,000 women Commission on Human Rights.145 34 per cent of women in prison in
and girls in prison globally.141 It is Australia but only 2 per cent of the
Further evidence has emerged
noteworthy that the world’s female adult female population.149 The UN
confirming that women are also
prison population has increased Special Rapporteur on violence against
frequently imprisoned for non-violent
by 53 per cent since 2000. This women visited the country in 2017,
minor offences committed in the
represents a significant rise compared which prompted a review of the policy
context of poverty and discrimination,
to male prison population rates, of incarceration for unpaid fines, given
and they have often been victims
which have risen by 20 per cent in the the disproportionate impact it has on
of violence themselves. A 2017 UN
same period. Aboriginal women.150 In the UK it was
report highlighted links between
reported that black women are 25 per
Female prison rates have risen sharply poverty, family roles and drug-related
cent more likely than white women to
over the past couple of years in Brazil, offences committed by women, raising
receive a custodial sentence.151
Indonesia, the Philippines and Turkey, concerns at their ‘overincarceration’ for
whereas substantial decreases were ‘transporting drugs (as mules), having Various initiatives sought to
reported in Mexico, Russia, Thailand a secondary role in the commission address the soaring rates of female
and Vietnam. Africa continued to of crimes or performing low-level imprisonment through non-custodial
have the smallest increase in the high-risk tasks, often at the request measures and sanctions in line
female prison population, whereas the of their partners’.146 Poverty was also with the 2010 UN Rules for the
Americas, Asia and Oceania saw sharp highlighted as the root cause of the Treatment of Women Prisoners and
rises overall.142 high number of women in pre-trial Non-custodial Measures for Women
detention in US jails which, research Offenders (the Bangkok Rules).
The US, China, Russia and Brazil
found, was most likely due to their
hold the highest number of women In February 2018, the Brazilian
inability to afford cash bail.147 In the
and girls in detention. Proportionally Federal Supreme Court decided that
UK, a new report provided evidence
the highest female prison population pregnant women and mothers with
of domestic abuse and ‘coercive
is in Hong Kong (at 20.8 per cent of children under the age of 12 who are
relationships’ being a driver to
the total prison population), where accused of non-violent crimes will be
women’s offending, citing that at least
the majority of women prisoners placed under house arrest instead of
57 per cent of women in prison had
are foreign nationals sentenced for in pre-trial detention.152 The judgment
been victims of domestic violence.148
drug-related offences (as drug ‘mules’) gave authorities 60 days to apply the
or immigration violations.143 order, which will affect at least 4,500
women who are currently detained.153

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PRISON POPULATIONS

New data published


showed that there are
now more than 714,000
women and girls in
prison globally
© Karla Nur, 2014

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PRISON POPULATIONS

The probation service in Kenya, improved access to sanitary products gender-sensitive rehabilitation, civil
together with PRI, implemented a for women prisoners.157 In Chiang society organisations often fill the gap.
project to ensure that community Mai, Thailand, a centre for women For example, a social enterprise in
service and probation are improved was set up to offer employment for Mexico, La Cana, facilitates craftwork
for women. (See New approach women released from prison who had for women prisoners and sells the
to probation and community graduated from the prison’s massage products on their behalf with positive
service for women, page 36).154 In training programme. outcomes: 92 per cent of the women
Costa Rica, several reforms have prisoners involved said that they
However, reports confirmed that the
been implemented to address the earned more money in prison than
UN Bangkok Rules have still not been
vulnerability of women offenders. they did before being imprisoned.160
implemented in many countries. The
Following a sentencing reform, (See Rehabilitation and reintegration,
European Parliament noted difficulties
approved in November 2013, to page 28).
for women prisoners in accessing
reduce the imprisonment of women
activities, sports grounds, libraries,
who smuggle drugs into prison,155 a RECOMMENDATION 09
etc., due to being housed in wings
new reform in January 2017 provides
of male prisons, and concluded The UN Bangkok Rules should
for the possibility to wipe criminal
that the Bangkok Rules are ‘seldom guide states in criminal justice
records in cases where offences
adhered to’ in the EU member reform to ensure systems meet
were committed in ‘situations of
states.158 In Uganda, women are the needs of women. Sentencing
vulnerability’.156
mostly excluded from formal education of women should take account
Some prison reforms to implement opportunities offered in prison, as of any victimisation, caretaking
the UN Bangkok Rules were reported evidenced in the 2017 O-Level responsibilities and context of
during 2017, although these were examinations where there were no the criminal conduct, giving
exceptional. For instance, in the female prisoner candidates.159 With preference to non-custodial
US, the Federal Bureau of Prisons many authorities failing to set up sanctions. (SDG 1, 5, 10 and 16)

Children
The total number of children in old. There will also be a new clause increased focus by police on serious
detention – those under 18 years stating that children between the ages offences (which tend to be committed
of age – was estimated to be about of 12 and 14 can only be held liable by adults), an increase in the use of
a million in 2010. The UN Global for an offence if the magistrate can diversion, and an overall reduction
Study on Children Deprived of Liberty determine the child had the necessary in youth crime.170 The role of social
has been long in the planning and maturity or knowledge to form the media in offences by children was also
seeks to document the full extent of intent to commit a crime.164 reported on in the UK: social media
children in detention. The study took was used in one in four cases where
Brazil, on the other hand, has a
a step forward with the appointment a child had committed a serious violent
controversial bill under consideration
of an Independent Expert and, amid offence, and is increasingly being
to treat 16 to 18-year-olds charged
concerns about a lack of funding,161 used by young people to incite and
with specific offences as adults.
research commenced in 2017. The plan crime.171
In Japan, the age of criminal
Study will be published in 2019.
responsibility is currently 20, but the Cases of systemic abuse of children
Developments in the treatment of Justice Minister has consulted an in detention, commonly exposed
children in criminal justice systems advisory panel about the possibility by independent monitoring bodies,
were mixed. The minimum age of of lowering it to 18.165 confirm that children in detention
criminal responsibility was reviewed in experience high levels of violence
Several countries took steps towards
a number of countries. Controversial as a matter of routine. For example,
establishing a separate justice system
proposals to lower the minimum in Australia a Royal Commission
for children, such as Cambodia
age of criminal responsibility from delivered its final report172 looking
where there are plans to construct a
15 to nine years were dropped in the at 10 years of youth detention and
new facility for children166 following a
Philippines,162 and the governor of welfare in the Northern Territories.
new juvenile justice law in 2016. In
New York signed a new bill raising It revealed shocking and systemic
Trinidad and Tobago three specialised
the age of criminal responsibility to failures resulting in widespread
Children’s Courts were planned,167 and
18 years of age for those charged mistreatment, primarily of Aboriginal
in Italy, a proposal to abolish Youth
with non-violent crimes. This will bring and Torres Strait Islander children
Courts and Youth Public Prosecutors
New York into line with 48 other US who are 25 times more likely to
was dropped in the face of widespread
states that allow children to be moved end up in the justice system than
public concern.168
from adult prisons to juvenile detention non-Indigenous children.
centres.163 In Sri Lanka, amendments New data from England and Wales
The situation of children held at a
to relevant legislation are being showed that arrests of children have
detention facility in Macedonia was
prepared for Parliament’s approval that fallen by as much as 64 per cent
deemed ‘totally unacceptable’ by
will raise the minimum age of criminal in the last six years.169 There are
the European Committee for the
responsibility from eight to 12 years diverse drivers for this, including an

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PRISON POPULATIONS

Prevention of Torture in response to detained alongside adults is common Other countries backtracked on plans
allegations of physical ill-treatment practice,177 and in Kenya children were to reintroduce capital punishment
and the lack of response to them.173 also often held alongside adults at for children, including Kuwait, which
In New Zealand, the Children’s police stations.178 Staffing shortages in March 2017 rapidly repealed the
Commission reported that teenage led to boys in the UK being held in death penalty and life imprisonment
boys at a youth prison had told them cells nearly all day, according to the after they were introduced for offences
how staff hit them ‘on the body where Prison Inspectorate.179 committed while aged over 16.184
it won’t mark’ during fight clubs held Also, in the Philippines, a proposal to
A small number of countries
away from CCTV cameras.174 In Brazil introduce the death penalty for children
retained the death penalty for crimes
four children were found dead after a was withdrawn.185 (See Death Penalty,
committed by children, which is
group of men broke into a detention page 13).
prohibited by international law.180
facility, capturing six children;175 in
During 2017, its use fell for the
addition, a bill was proposed that RECOMMENDATION 10
second year running, although Iran
would permit staff at detention facilities
executed at least four people who Detention of children should
for children to use electric shock
were children at the time of the alleged be used as a very last resort,
weapons, riot control equipment and
offence and many more remain at and the death penalty and
firearms in certain situations, which is
risk of execution.181 Authorities in life imprisonment should
incompatible with various international
the Puntland region of Somalia are be prohibited for children.
standards including the UN Rules for
reported to have executed five boys States should adopt child-
the protection of Juveniles Deprived of
aged 14 to 17 in April 2017.182 A man friendly justice systems
their Liberty (the UN Havana Rules).176
in Japan was hanged for a crime and protect children from
Practices of detaining children with committed when he was 19 years old violence and ill-treatment.
adults and in deplorable conditions (the age of criminal responsibility in (SDGs 3, 4, 5, 10 and 16)
also continue. Zambia’s Human Rights Japan is 20).183
Commission found that children being

Elderly people
Healthcare professionals normally tailored towards younger prisoners and the objective of early detection
use the age of 65 as the point at fail to address the specific needs of and providing needed support; it is
which someone is termed as elderly. older prisoners. estimated that 14 per cent of the
In prisons, the demarcation is often country’s over-60 prison population
Elderly prisoners have higher than
younger, sometimes at 50 years, has dementia.193 In the UK, a unit was
average rates of recidivism in Japan,
since so many prisoners have health opened specifically for older prisoners,
for example, which has been attributed
conditions, histories of substance although it has been suggested
to their unique difficulties in obtaining
dependence and limited access that older prisoners can be a
employment on release as well as to
to healthcare. stabilising force and age-segregated
isolation and poverty.189
units can break constructive
In many countries, the proportion
One response to the growing relationships between younger and
of elderly prisoners has continued
population of elderly prisoners has older prisoners.194
to rise. Singapore saw the number
been to facilitate early release on
of prisoners aged over 60 double
compassionate grounds, like in the RECOMMENDATION 11
between 2012 and 2016,186 and in
US.190 In the Philippines, 127 prisoners
Australia, the number of prisoners over States should assess the needs
were released on the basis of their
the age of 50 has grown by a third in of elderly prisoners, including
age and illness in 2017, and in
just five years.187 In the UK, the number for rehabilitation, reintegration
Argentina, courts can order people
of prisoners over 60 has tripled in and healthcare, to inform
older than 70 years to be held under
15 years.188 prison regimes. Early release
house arrest.191
mechanisms should be adopted
Elderly prisoners are a diverse and
Recent studies show that there is a for elderly prisoners.
complex population. Challenges for
need for clear and explicit strategies (SDGs 10 and 16)
prison authorities include responding
to respond to the challenges posed
to chronic illnesses and disabilities
by this growing group of the prison
common among elderly people, such
population.192 In Japan, a pilot is
as dementia. Rehabilitation, work and
ongoing to assess all prisoners
release programmes are generally
aged over 60 for dementia, with

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PRISON POPULATIONS

Lesbian, gay,
bisexual, transgender
and intersex
(LGBTI) people
In more than 70 countries, same-sex
relations are criminalised,195 and the
death penalty can still be applied for
New protection for LGBTI Principle 9 calls upon states to
ensure that placement in detention
same-sex relations in a number of people in detention avoids further marginalisation and
countries in Africa and Asia. There are that LGBTI people have access
A new set of principles were
also laws that specifically criminalise to the healthcare and counselling
adopted in November 2017
that they need, including hormone
transgender persons based on their to supplement the original
therapy and gender reassignment.
gender identity or expression.196 2006 Yogyakarta Principles on
It also calls for protective measures
Overall, there are no clear trends international human rights law
to be in place that do not involve
relating to sexual orientation,
regarding the de-criminalisation restriction of rights, the provision
gender identity and expression,
of same-sex relations, with some of conjugal visits regardless of
and sex characteristics. A key
countries becoming increasingly the gender of the partner, and
addition was Principle 9, relating
training and awareness-raising
tolerant, including in Latin America, to the treatment of LGBTI people
of prison staff.
North America and Europe, and others in detention.
more repressive.197
LGBTI people continue to be arrested
and imprisoned because of their
identity. Whilst in detention, they are
Some positive policies were put in additional principle specifically on the
also frequently discriminated against,
place to protect LGBTI people in right to treatment with humanity while
harassed, and face serious violence
detention, but they were not always in detention.210 (See New protection
and even torture. In Chechnya, there
effectively implemented. New rules for LGBTI people in detention, above).
were widespread arrests of gay men,
were introduced in California, US, for
who were held in unofficial detention
hundreds of transgender prisoners RECOMMENDATION 12
facilities for days, humiliated, starved,
regarding clothing, medical care and
and tortured.198 In Azerbaijan, reports States should take measures
the prisons they are assigned to, but
emerged of the torture of gay men to protect LGBTI people
authorities reported challenges in
and transgender women because of in detention, in line with
implementation.204 In Thailand, the
their sexual identity,199 and in Egypt, the Yogyakarta Principles.
Department of Corrections announced
2017 was marked by extensive arrests Protection from violence and
plans to separate LGBTI prisoners
and ill-treatment of LGBTI people on stigmatisation should be
in different ‘zones’ within prisons to
charges of ‘debauchery’.200 A 2017 ensured, without restricting
ensure their safety and security.205 In
study from Costa Rica showed that rights, and adequate
Canada, the federal prison service
transgender people in prison lack healthcare must be provided,
adopted a new policy on transgender
access to hormonal treatment and including hormone therapy
prisoners206 and approved the
face verbal and physical violence.201 and gender reassignment.
first-ever transfer of a transgender
(SDGs 5, 10 and 16)
A report in the US found that LGBTI prisoner to an institution based on their
youth were over-represented in the gender identity, rather than physical
criminal justice system, faced bias anatomy.207 An Israeli prison agreed
in court decisions regarding pre-trial to allow a homosexual conjugal visit
detention and sentencing, and were for the first time, following a court
at higher risk of being placed in ruling that it was discriminatory not
solitary confinement or segregated to allow this.208
units.202 In another finding, women
The UN increasingly raised the rights
who identified as lesbian or bisexual
of LGBTI prisoners during 2017209
represented approximately a third
and the ‘Yogyakarta Principles’
of imprisoned women in the US, a
– Principles on the application of
proportion that is eight to 10 times
international human rights law in
higher than the 3.4 per cent in the
relation to sexual orientation and
general population.203
gender identity – were updated and
strengthened. They now include an

20 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
PRISON POPULATIONS

People with
disabilities
Aside from country-specific reports, by telephone was exposed as being There is growing awareness of this
there is little data on the number faulty and outdated,214 and a report challenge, and there have been some
of people in prison with disabilities, revealed the devastating harm caused moves towards diverting people with
although trends suggest that the by placing prisoners with physical mental illness away from prison. A
growing prison population in most disabilities in solitary confinement, ground-breaking law was passed in
countries and the significant increase which is frequently imposed owing South Africa that stops the automatic
of older prisoners in some countries to a lack of cells designed for their imprisonment of accused persons
have led to an increase in the number needs.215 In Florida, more than who are mentally ill or intellectually
of people with disabilities in prisons. 30 prisoners who are deaf, blind or disabled.221 In early 2018, the
For example, people with disabilities in wheelchairs claimed in court they Supreme Court in Brazil ruled that
are over-represented in Australian were not allowed to participate in jobs, persons with disabilities should not
prisons, where they represent 18 per services and programmes available be put into pre-trial detention.222 The
cent of the country’s population to others.216 Canadian Correctional Ombudsperson
but almost 50 per cent of people highlighted that women with serious
People in prison are disproportionately
entering prison.211 mental illness need to be placed in
affected by mental illness and prisons
psychiatric facilities outside of prison.223
Prisoners with physical disabilities frequently fail in providing adequate
confront numerous challenges, mental health provision. Ill-treatment A new report was published on
such as not having access to the of prisoners with mental illness is international good principles for
healthcare they require to manage also commonly reported. In Australia, operational and design consideration
their disability; not receiving the research indicated that half of all adult of prison facilities, in order to mitigate
support they need with daily activities prisoners have been diagnosed or the detrimental impact prisons have
such as eating, dressing and washing; treated for a mental health problem on people with mental illness.224
and being denied hearing aids, Braille and 87 per cent of young people
documents and interpreters, which in custody have a past or present RECOMMENDATION 13
makes it impossible to participate in psychological disorder.217 The report
States should collect data on
rehabilitative activities.212 In a significant found that prisoners with mental health
the number of people in prison
ruling against Latvia, the European disorders are at risk of spending days,
with disabilities, and review
Court of Human Rights found that weeks, months and sometimes even
their needs in order to inform
the anguish a deaf and mute prisoner years locked up alone in detention
policy and practice, in line
had suffered – from not being able or safety units.218 A report by the
with international standards.
to communicate that he lacked the US Justice Department’s Inspector
This should include training
necessary amount of personal space General found that prisoners with
of staff and policies to protect
in his cell – constituted inhuman or mental illnesses in federal prison
discriminatory treatment and
degrading treatment.213 also spend, on average, more time
abuse, as well as architectural
in solitary confinement or restrictive
In the US there were several reports measures. (SDGs 10 and 16)
housing than prisoners without
on the failings of authorities to provide
documented mental illnesses.219
for prisoners with disabilities. The
In Belgium, hundreds of people with
technology for deaf prisoners to
mental disabilities continued to be
communicate with family and friends
detained in inadequate prison wards.220

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 | 21
PRISON MANAGEMENT

PART FOUR

Prison
management

Security
and violence
A dynamic security approach to decline in safety in prisons since 2012 While reliable statistics on the scale of
prison management, which is based and statistics from September 2017 the use of torture remain scarce – not
on positive prisoner-staff relations show a record high in the number of least due to under-reporting by the
and prison intelligence, has become self-harm and assault incidents. This many victims237 – there are indications
more widely respected. There is also is attributed to reductions in staffing that torture is on the rise. UN anti-
greater appreciation for security as and difficulties in retaining staff, torture experts noted in 2017 that
an important precondition to effective high levels of drug use (particularly the absolute prohibition of torture is
rehabilitation, although many prison new psychoactive substances),230 ‘challenged in the name of national
systems struggle to reduce excessive overcrowding, and long-term shifts in security across the globe’.238
levels of violence and deaths and to the nature of the prison population.231
Reports of the use of torture
address torture.
Prison riots led to deaths in several reflect a common pattern: that it is
Deaths in custody due to countries during 2017, including the commonly used by law enforcement
inter-prisoner violence or abuse and Philippines, Indonesia, Nigeria, Congo agencies in the pre-trial stage to
neglect by prison staff continued to and South Africa.232 There were also extract confessions. (See Pre-trial
be commonplace in many countries. riots – fuelled by gang disputes – in justice, page 10). For instance,
There was outrage in Guatemala after Latin American countries including the UN Committee against Torture
41 adolescent girls were killed in a Guatemala, the Dominican Republic, noted that in Sri Lanka ‘in numerous
fire in a state-run institution in March Mexico, Venezuela and Colombia.233 documented cases of torture, the
2017. Officials and police officers were In Brazil, riots continued unabated accused persons alleged that they
charged with manslaughter, among during 2017 with authorities struggling were forced to sign blank sheets of
other charges, after the girls, allegedly to gain control of prisons. The Rio paper or self-incriminatory statements
locked inside a room, died as a result state government released figures that written in a language they did not
of burns and smoke inhalation.225 In showed a 26 per cent rise in killings in understand’.239 Furthermore, Amnesty
Argentina, the National Penitentiary 2017 compared to 2015.234 Fifty-six International has reported on torture
Office recorded eight ‘violent deaths’ people died in a riot in the Amazonas by authorities to extract ‘confessions’
of federal prisoners in the first half of city of Manaus and officials reported in a number of countries, including
2017.226 Correction services in Papua some bodies were decapitated Egypt, United Arab Emirates, Iraq,
New Guinea called for an inquiry after and burned.235 Kuwait, Nepal, Saudi Arabia and
17 escapees were shot and killed by Turkmenistan.240
Gangs continued to control many
prison guards in March 2017, although
prisons in Latin America; for example,
the investigation has not yet started RECOMMENDATION 14
as many as 65 per cent of Mexico’s
due to a lack of funding.227 In the
state prisons are thought to be States should ensure the
US state of Alabama, eight people
controlled by organised crime groups. safety of prisoners, including
were killed in prison during 2017,
Different measures to manage gangs through dynamic security
representing the highest number
in prisons were tried in the region. The and safeguards to uphold
of prison homicides in the state
El Salvadorian government extended the absolute prohibition
to date.228
‘extraordinary measures’ to reduce of torture. There should be
Record levels of prisoner violence the control of the MS13 and Barrio adequate staff-prisoner ratios
were also reported in a number 18 gangs, classified as terrorist to guarantee the exercise of
of other prison systems such as groups by the government, in the effective control of prison
in New Zealand, where the Chief country’s prisons. Honduras closed facilities. (SDGs 10 and 16)
Ombudsperson found ‘unacceptable’ a prison known to be a ‘criminal
rates of violence, after half of the hub’ in October 2017, opening a
prisoners surveyed in one visit said new maximum-security prison in
they had been assaulted.229 England its place.236
and Wales has witnessed a steady

22 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
PRISON MANAGEMENT

Hunger strikes in prison hunger strike following their


transfer to a high-security section
in Guantánamo Bay, the US continued
to force-feed hunger strikers, and a
Hunger strikes have long been of Rajai-Shar prison, where they recent change in policy means that
employed by prisoners – both were reportedly held in cells with their declining health is no longer
individuals and large groups – as windows covered by metal sheets monitored.249
a form of protest and as an attempt and denied basic needs.244
to make their voices heard regarding The UN Committee against Torture
poor conditions, violence and Responses to hunger strikes by prison has stated that force-feeding of
mistreatment in detention, or injustice authorities vary but are frequently in prisoners on hunger strike constitutes
in trial processes. violation of international standards. ill-treatment and that measures,
Some force-feed prisoners or deny including legislation, should be in
In August 2017, more than 500 them medical treatment and others place to ensure that it is prevented.250
prisoners went on hunger strike in take punishment measures. In Cuba, Furthermore, the World Medical
Argentina protesting overcrowded prisoners on hunger strike ‘endure Association is clear that individuals
conditions, lack of access to healthcare extended solitary confinement, ‘capable of forming an unimpaired
and poor hygiene, as well as the beatings, restrictions on family rational judgment concerning the
treatment of a prisoner who was visits, and are denied medical consequences…[of refusing food] shall
wounded by rubber bullets and care’.245 Free medical care has been not be fed artificially’.251 It further
chained to a wall for three days.241 refused to prisoners on hunger states that force-feeding is ‘never
In South Africa, the start of 2018 saw strike in Russia,246 and in August ethically acceptable’ and hunger
96 life-sentenced prisoners go on 2017, a prisoner in Iran was refused strikers in prisons must be advised
hunger strike to protest against unfair hospitalisation by prison authorities on the effects of their actions, while
delays in the parole process, with one for digestive complications following the decision to hunger strike must not
prisoner hospitalised.242 his long-term hunger strike.247 prejudice any other aspect of medical
care.252 The International Committee
The UN Special Rapporteur on In 2017 the Israeli Prison Service of the Red Cross is similarly opposed
the human rights situation in punished around 1,500 Palestinian to force-feeding on grounds of
Iran expressed deep concern in prisoners on hunger strike with human dignity.253
2017 243 about the situation of a solitary confinement and denial of
number of prisoners on prolonged family visits.248 In the military prison

Prison staff
On the one hand, there is growing reported to be looked after by 26,000 environment. The federal government
recognition of the importance of prison officials, several major violent agreed to a settlement of USD$20
investing in staff, and of the fact that incidents that led to serious injuries of million, along with commitments
selection, recruitment and training both corrections officials and prisoners to reforms that would improve
of staff is critical to effective prison were blamed on staff shortages and employees’ safety.260 A female prison
management and safety. On the overcrowding.258 officer in Northern Ireland received
other hand, poor working conditions compensation from the prison service
Prison staff continue to strike in
persist. In June 2017, the Council of for discrimination, bullying and
response to violence, staff shortages
Europe Conference of Directors of harassment resulting from failure to
and working conditions. For instance,
Prison and Probation Services called accommodate the fact that she was
in early 2018, prison staff in France
for new European standards on the breastfeeding on her return to work
went on strike in response to a series
‘recruitment and selection criteria after maternity leave.261
of attacks, one of which involved a
of different levels of staff working in
prisoner convicted for terrorist-related Positively, Rwanda has had success
prison and probation services, as well
offences who attacked four staff in increasing the proportion of female
as regarding their education, training
members with scissors and a razor prison guards from 8 per cent in 2011
and professional development’,254 and
blade. After a series of strikes by to 24 per cent in 2017, and there are
a handbook will be developed during
prison staff in England and Wales calls to increase numbers further still
2018–19.255
and amid damning reports of the to reach the country’s labour law quota
Reports continued to emerge of prison impacts of budget cuts and staff of 30 per cent.262
staff being attacked. For example, in shortages, the UK Government
Scotland, data showed that a prison succeeded in obtaining a permanent RECOMMENDATION 15
staff member was attacked every two ban on industrial strikes from the
States should protect prison
days in 2016–17.256 In recent years High Court.259
staff from discrimination
serious attacks against staff have been
Female prison officers are a minority in and violence, including
reported in a large number of prison
the sector and face distinct challenges gender-based violence.
systems, including in India, Canada
in their work. In the US a class-action Remuneration and working
and the US.257
lawsuit involved more than 500 women conditions should reflect the
In many cases, assaults against staff employed at the largest male federal challenging nature of prison
were linked to budget cuts or staff prison. They alleged harassment from work and encourage recruitment
shortages. In South Africa, where the both co-workers and prisoners, sex of female correctional staff.
prison population of over 160,000 is discrimination, and a hostile work (SDGs 5, 8 and 16)

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 | 23
PRISON MANAGEMENT

A shortage of
qualified healthcare
staff continues to act
as a barrier to health
provision in prison
© Karla Nur, 2014

24 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
PRISON MANAGEMENT

Health
People in prison frequently have comprehensive health services in the transmission of HIV – remains
complex health needs. There are female prisons aimed at HIV prevention politicised in states that adopt a
high rates of premature mortality and treatment.271 In 2017, UNAIDS prohibitionist stance towards drug
and mental health illness, as well as published a roadmap to accelerate use. In 2016, only eight countries
disease resulting from unhygienic HIV prevention in 24 focus countries, implemented Needle and Syringe
prison conditions. The rates for HIV, identifying restrictions on health Programmes in at least one prison,
tuberculosis and other infectious services in prisons as one reason and they were entirely unavailable
diseases among prisoners remain for insufficient progress towards to prisoners in seven out of the nine
much higher than in the general Goal 3. Significant funding to boost regions reviewed by Harm Reduction
community. The Joint United Nations efforts towards the target has been International.275
Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) dedicated by both governments and
However, some positive moves
estimates that people in prison are foundations,272 although US President
have been seen recently to reduce
on average five times more likely to Donald Trump proposed budget cuts
high rates of drug overdose in the
be living with HIV compared with to HIV/AIDS programmes in 2018
immediate post-release period,
adults outside prisons,263 although a totalling USD$800 million.273
including provision of naloxone kits
higher estimate of 15 per cent is given
Despite such commitments and the (naloxone is used to treat narcotic
by the World Health Organization.264
identification by UNAIDS of prisoners overdoses) upon release in Canada,276
A shortage of qualified healthcare staff as a key population left behind in and overdose prevention training in
continues to act as a barrier to health responses to the HIV/AIDS epidemic, Moldova and Ireland.277
provision in prison. For example, in treatment provision and prevention
Uganda, only 56 of 448 prison units measures in prisons are non-existent RECOMMENDATION 16
across the country have provision in some countries, and remain
Drug prevention and treatment
for health clinics.265 Similarly, in wholly inadequate in many others.
and HIV prevention, treatment
Bangladesh, there are 63 jails without For example, in Uganda only 33 of
and care should be available
doctors.266 In Scotland, a government 448 prison facilities are accredited to
to people in prison at the same
report found that prisoners were not provide anti-retroviral treatment (ART),
level as that provided in the
receiving the healthcare they needed and pre-trial detainees in Zimbabwe
community. Efforts to recruit
because there were not enough prison have claimed that the acute shortage
sufficient healthcare staff in
staff to transfer them to health centres of ART in prisons is life-threatening.274
prisons should be doubled.
– 50 per cent of clinical time was
The implementation of harm (SDGs 3 and 10)
wasted due to missed appointments.267
reduction measures – evidence-
Serious outbreaks of disease in prisons based interventions to prevent
in 2017 were seen in several countries.
In Yemen, PRI provided medicines to
treat the cholera outbreak in a prison
in the capital Sana’a; the International Smoking bans in prison including in Missouri, US where an
asthmatic prisoner succeeded in
Committee of the Red Cross estimated A large majority of people in prison a decade-long battle when a legal
that the cholera epidemic in the smoke tobacco, with prevalence rates settlement was reached in 2017
country reached one million suspected ranging from 64 to 90 per cent.278 requiring the state’s prisons to go
cases in December 2017.268 A cholera Statistics indicate that more female smoke-free.283
prisoners smoke, compared with
outbreak at a Kisumu prison in Kenya their male counterparts.279 In nearly Prison systems often fail to provide
was also reported in July 2017,269 and all countries, smoking is a normal cessation programmes alongside
in Zimbabwe, a typhoid outbreak in the part of prison culture for a variety smoking bans, leading to withdrawal
capital Harare spread to two prisons in of reasons, including boredom and and increased levels of anxiety,
the stresses of being detained. boredom and violence. Prisoners
early 2017, leading to an unconfirmed rioted in Victoria, Australia when a
number of prisoners’ deaths.270 Aside from the direct impact ban was introduced in 2015, and last
on health of smoking tobacco, year a smoking ban across England
One area where there has been
prisoners and staff face an ‘elevated and Wales led to a rise in the use of
increasing attention at the international probability’ of being exposed to psychoactive substances and a rise
level is in the prevention of HIV/AIDS in second-hand smoke, due to the large in violence.284 Smoking bans have also
prisons. The international community number of smokers in small spaces led to cigarettes and nicotine patches
has made various commitments, that often have poor ventilation.280 becoming sought-after contraband or
notably in Goal 3 of the Sustainable Some prison systems have imposed tradable commodities.285
partial or full smoking bans in
Development Goals which commits to The World Health Organization
prisons, although smoking bans
end the HIV/AIDS epidemic by 2030. are mostly found in Europe, North warns that while smoking bans in
In May 2017, the UN Commission on America and Australasia.281 Of 32 prisons have shown improvements in
Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice European countries where data was air quality, there is limited available
evidence of their impact on stopping
adopted a resolution on ensuring collected, 25 have smoke-free cells in
some or all prisons.282 Smoking bans people from smoking. Therefore
access to measures for the prevention it recommends a comprehensive
of mother-to-child transmission of HIV have been the subject of legal battles,
strategy to change behaviour.286
in prisons, urging states to ensure

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 | 25
PRISON MANAGEMENT

Solitary
confinement
Solitary confinement – often also their disability, and prisoners with committed suicide while in solitary
labelled ‘segregation’, ‘isolation’, mobility disabilities are denied access confinement within three months
‘lockdown’ or ‘supermax’ – is defined to necessary physical therapy and of one another.300
by the Nelson Mandela Rules as the prescription medications.293 In Japan,
A number of countries segregated
‘confinement of prisoners for 22 hours where the overall use of solitary
individuals suspected or convicted
or more a day without meaningful confinement is falling, the number
of terrorism-related offences. This
human contact’. With some notable of individuals in solitary confinement
included the Netherlands, where such
exceptions, it continues to be used for longer than 10 years increased
individuals were held in prolonged
across the globe – including for by over 50 per cent between the
solitary confinement in ‘special
vulnerable groups such as prisoners years 2012 and 2016, and almost
terrorism prisons’, a practice that was
with disabilities and children – in half of these individuals were mentally
rebuked in a 2017 report by Amnesty
contravention of international disabled.294 In Bahrain, concern has
International and the Open Society
standards.287 This is despite increasing been expressed about a human rights
Justice Initiative.301 (See also Violent
recognition of its detrimental defender and opposition leader who
extremism, page 28).
psychological and physiological has reportedly been kept in solitary
effects,288 and of the economic confinement for nine months, despite Prolonged solitary confinement also
costs – one study found that solitary having medical conditions that required continued to be used in several
confinement cells cost three times as hospitalisation.295 The UN Committee countries such as Lebanon302 and
much to run as ordinary prison cells.289 against Torture also observed in South Korea.303 In both countries,
Afghanistan that solitary confinement prisoners can be segregated for
New Zealand, for instance, saw a
is applied to persons with infectious up to 30 consecutive days as a
151 per cent rise290 in the use of
diseases and mental illness.296 disciplinary measure, a practice
solitary confinement over the five-year
criticised by the UN Committee
period up until 2016, compared However, in a positive contrast, an
against Torture, which recalled the
to a 16 per cent rise in the prison alleged hacker successfully appealed
Nelson Mandela Rules prohibition
population.291 Around 8 per cent of against extradition to the US from the
on prolonged solitary confinement.304
cases had been isolated for longer UK, partly on the basis that he would
than the 15-day limit imposed by likely be kept in solitary confinement, The use of solitary confinement
the Nelson Mandela Rules, and a where his physical and mental for children continued, despite a
disproportionate number (62 per conditions would be exacerbated.297 prohibition in international standards.305
cent) of prisoners placed in solitary In Australia, authorities defended
A disproportionate number of
confinement were of Indigenous Maori ˉ the placement of two teenagers in
suicides continued to occur in solitary
or Pacific Island descent.292 solitary confinement for over 250
confinement.297 For example, a
days each,306 and the case of a child
Prisoners with mental or physical quarter of prison suicides occurred
held in solitary confinement for over
health issues continue to be placed in segregation cells in the US state of
100 days in the UK was found, in
in solitary confinement. In the US, a Texas, which hold only 2.7 per cent
court, not to constitute inhuman or
report detailed how blind and deaf of the prison population.299 In South
degrading treatment.307 Armenia’s
prisoners in solitary confinement Africa, an investigation by the Judicial
retention of the practice as a
experience a heightened form of Inspectorate for correctional services
disciplinary measure for juveniles was
sensory deprivation as a result of was triggered after two prisoners
criticised by the UN Committee against
Torture.308 In the US however, there
were significant moves towards the
elimination of solitary confinement for
Canadian court rules than 15 days – was unconstitutional,
noting that this was ‘a generous
juveniles, following a ban on its use in
federal prisons.309
prolonged and indefinite standard given the overwhelming
solitary confinement evidence that even within that space
of time an individual can suffer
Some countries saw limits being
imposed on or a reduction in the
unconstitutional severe psychological harm’.312 In use of solitary confinement. There
August 2017 there were roughly
The British Columbia Supreme 300 prisoners segregated in
was a substantial overall drop in the
Court of Canada ruled in January federal prisons.313 use of ‘administrative segregation’
2018 that ‘administrative in Canadian prisons: in August 2017
segregation’ used by Canadian The decision was hailed by the approximately 300 prisoners were
federal prisons constituted solitary British Columbia Civil Liberties
Association as ‘the most significant
segregated, a decrease from 800
confinement, as defined by Rule
44 of the Nelson Mandela Rules.311 trial court decision in the prison in 2014.310 This coincided with a
context that we’ve seen in Canadian significant judgment from the Supreme
Significantly, the Court found that history’.314 In February 2018, the Court of British Columbia declaring the
prolonged segregation – defined by federal government announced they use of both prolonged and indefinite
the Nelson Mandela Rules as more would appeal the decision.315 solitary confinement unconstitutional,

26 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
GLOBAL PRISON TRENDS
SPECIAL FOCUS 2018

THE REHABILITATION AND


REINTEGRATION OF OFFENDERS
IN THE ERA OF SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT

Pull-out section
SPECIAL FOCUS

The rehabilitation and


reintegration of offenders
in the era of sustainable
development
Fair and effective criminal justice systems can play a vital role in ensuring
sustainable and inclusive development for all. This section builds on the
Special Focus of Global Prison Trends 2017, ‘The Sustainable Development
Goals and Criminal Justice’. It explores how the rehabilitation and
reintegration of offenders back into their communities can incorporate
a broader developmental perspective, contributing to the goals set out
in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

Reviewing criminal justice policy


through the development lens1
With the adoption of the A development-led approach can justice actors can work together
2030 Agenda for Sustainable bring a wider perspective to this with other sectors, including the
Development by the United work by looking not only at the private sector and civil society,
Nations General Assembly in impact of rehabilitation on the as well as with authorities working
2015, UN member states renewed individual offender but also the in areas such as health, housing
their commitment to making impact on their community and and education.
the world a better place for on wider society. By applying
In many parts of the world,
generations to come. Through a development ‘lens’ to the
programmes and measures are
Goal 16, which promotes peace, rehabilitation and reintegration
already in place that follow the
justice and the rule of law, of offenders, including through
basic principles of this kind of
the Sustainable Development targeted interventions for specific
integrated approach. This Special
Goals (SDGs) recognise that vulnerable groups, the scope
Focus outlines four promising
development efforts are closely of criminal justice interventions
practices, and it is hoped that
linked with the justice sector. is broadened beyond their
these will inspire those working in
traditional boundaries.
The rehabilitation and reintegration criminal justice systems to support
of offenders, a primary aim Development and justice the achievement of the SDGs, and
of criminal justice systems, organisations have tended to take advantage of an integrated
has traditionally focused on to operate in isolation from multi-agency approach to
changing the behaviour of the each other. For states to fulfil improve their work in the effective
individual and improving their their commitment to ‘leave no rehabilitation and reintegration
situation, for example through one behind’, there needs to of offenders.
providing housing or helping be improved integration and
them to find employment. cooperation, so that criminal

2 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
THE REHABILITATION AND REINTEGRATION OF OFFENDERS IN THE ERA OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT

Promising practices guided


by development-led perspectives
The following four initiatives The initiatives have some common needs of vulnerable groups and
illustrate how targeted criminal elements, notably a willingness to address discrimination and
justice interventions can contribute to take into consideration the social exclusion.
to sustainable development.

Integrated support
for the reintegration
of women offenders
in Thailand
In recent years, the Thai prison A more recent initiative from 2017 are identified by prisoners and
system has explored how is a training course for women staff, with the help from the
development-led approaches can prisoners on how to work within SME instructors and the SME
be used in the rehabilitation and small and medium-size enterprises Promotion and Development
reintegration of prisoners. These (SMEs).3 The course equips Trade Association.
approaches have largely sought them with skills to start their own
The aim of these rehabilitative
to overcome unemployment, which business, leading to sustainable
programmes is to reduce rates
is a key barrier to reintegration for employment opportunities. The
of reoffending and combat
women when leaving prison, given Thailand Institute of Justice (TIJ)
the discrimination that women
their high levels of poverty and the is working in collaboration with the
prisoners often experience on
stigmatisation and discrimination SME Promotion and Development
release. At the same time, they
they face. Trade Association on this initiative.
address underlying issues and
Initiatives have included the In 2018, the ‘Model Prison barriers to development, notably
establishment of the ‘Lila Thai Plus (+)’ project4 was developed gender inequality and poverty,
Massage Ex-Inmate Employment in Thailand to promote whilst promoting sustained and
and Skill Development Centre’, set comprehensive rehabilitation inclusive economic growth and
up in Chiang Mai in 2014, which programmes. The aim of the decent work.
offers employment upon release project is to build the knowledge
for graduates from the Chiang and skills of prisoners through
Mai women prison’s massage intensive courses on financial
training programme. The women planning and debt literacy
earn the equivalent of USD$950 programmes, and to provide
per month, which is more than comprehensive psychological
twice the average monthly income support to help them return
in Thailand (about USD$450).2 to society and to the job market.
The Centre, in response to the The SME training course
increasing demand, has now mentioned above has been
expanded its service to cover six integrated into this project;
locations in the city of Chiang Mai. for example, new opportunities

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 |3
SPECIAL FOCUS

Improving reintegration
services for youth offenders
in Jamaica to tackle
developmental impacts
of youth violence
The issues around Caribbean This development-led approach provided by 17 social workers
youth and their involvement in involves a range of bodies, across the country to 580 boys
crime and violence are complex, including the Organization of and girls released from two
and include high levels of youth American States, the Ministry of institutions. Under the scheme,
unemployment, poor educational National Security, the Department 42 young people have been
opportunities, ‘feelings of of Correctional Services of offered apprenticeships or jobs
voicelessness’, and exclusion from Jamaica, civil society, and the through partnerships with the
national and regional governance private sector. Youth in detention private sector. An additional 51
processes.5 In many cases, youth facilities are trained on marketable benefitted from extensive training
violence is a response to the threat technical skills and life skills, and in entrepreneurship during a
and fear of victimisation and has given individualised psychosocial one-week residence programme,
its roots in endemic community support to enable their successful with 21 awarded micro-grants to
violence. The UN Development reintegration into society. The start their own business. In 2018,
Programme has concluded that project assists them upon the activities of the project will be
‘youth violence is more than a release in accessing educational, expanded from two facilities to all
security concern. It is a major vocational and internship or four institutions for youth offenders
human development problem’.6 employment opportunities, while in the country.
providing comprehensive case
The project ‘A New Path’ in The objective of the project is
management for six to 12 months
Jamaica has sought to address to address the developmental
after release.
this complex mix of societal, impacts of youth violence by
community, inter-personal and Approximately 950 young people responding to the protection
individual factors leading to have received assistance through needs of these marginalised
widespread youth violence, the project, and 385 girls and young people. The project
by improving the availability boys have successfully completed mitigates the damage caused by
and quality of reintegration educational, recreational and contact with the criminal justice
services, technical training vocational courses that ranged system by providing decent
and psychosocial support from classical music and work and targeted support
services for convicted youth. life skills to crafts and yoga. with reintegration.
Post-release support has been

4 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
THE REHABILITATION AND REINTEGRATION OF OFFENDERS IN THE ERA OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT

Reform to erase
criminal records
of offenders with
vulnerabilities
in Costa Rica7
Criminal records often constitute A legislative reform in Costa Rica gain employment because of their
a significant barrier for offenders since January 2017 has sought criminal record, despite having
to gaining employment and living to overcome these difficulties by relevant work experience and
law-abiding lives after release incorporating a development-led skills; this in turn perpetuates
from prison. The primary purpose approach. Policymakers have cycles of poverty and recidivism.
of criminal records is to provide reconsidered how decisions
The law is applicable for people
criminal justice practitioners, taken within the criminal justice
imprisoned for minor offences
such as law enforcement officers, system can also have an impact
(carrying a penalty of five years
prosecutors, probation officers on the possibility of productive
of imprisonment or less) who
and judges, with information and decent work for all. It seeks to
have served their sentence. The
on the past criminal activity of address systemic issues leading
offender must have been in a
an individual – information that to unemployment and labour
situation of vulnerability (such
may affect decisions on bail and discrimination in private and
as poverty, social exclusion and
sentence. However, criminal public sectors.
discrimination) at the time that
records are widely used for other
The new law permits courts to the offence was committed.
purposes, in particular in the
erase a criminal record. The law The record may be erased
employment sector, as well as in
outlines criteria for the court to immediately or between three
the provision of public housing and
take into account, which include to five years after their release,
for the right to vote and the right
the length of the sentence, which is significantly less than
to receive welfare. Employers may
the offence committed and, the previous 10-year requirement.
request to review a criminal record
when relevant, the ‘situation of
during the recruitment process, It remains to be seen what
vulnerability’ of the offender. While
which can result in exclusion situation would constitute
the reform does not specifically
from obtaining employment ‘vulnerability’ under the reform,
target women, they are likely
in the formal economy. This and currently this is at the full
to benefit as the majority of
can have particularly serious discretion of the judge in each
non-violent female offenders are
consequences for women, case. Thus, while the initiative
imprisoned for property crimes or
their families and dependents, is an illustration of good
small-scale drug-related offences,
as women already suffer from emerging practice, its successful
often committed in a context of
labour market exclusion and implementation remains to
vulnerability and poverty. In the
social discrimination. be seen.
past, such women struggled to

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 |5
SPECIAL FOCUS

Economic empowerment
of offenders serving
community service
sentences in Kenya8
Together with the Kenya this was therefore a key challenge him being fully accepted by his
Probation and Aftercare Service, to overcome in the rehabilitation community because he was
Penal Reform International of offenders. financially stable and more able
implemented an innovative project to take care of his dependents.
One outcome of this project,
to disrupt the poverty-prison
which was implemented In order to address the stigma
cycle through improving and
between 2014–2016 in Kenya, faced by offenders, this project
increasing the use of community
was economic empowerment also improved the public
service – a humane and
opportunities for former awareness and understanding of
effective alternative to custodial
offenders who completed their community service. For example,
sentences. The initiative adopted
community service sanction. court open days were held for the
a development-led approach by
Entrepreneurial training was public to visit and find out about
tackling poverty, inequality and
provided alongside a small the work of the criminal justice
gender disempowerment. It sought
investment to allow individuals system, while engagement with the
to reduce the unnecessary use of
to open a basic business, so that media increased positive coverage
imprisonment in recognition of its
they could support themselves of community-based sentences in
negative and long-lasting effects
and their families, thereby reducing the press.
for both the imprisoned individual
reoffending. Probation officers
and their family. Imprisonment This initiative demonstrates
worked closely with individuals to
leads to hidden impacts for family the potential of alternatives
identify what kind of investment
and communities, including being to imprisonment, such as
would help to prevent their
unable to buy food or afford school community service, to support the
previous poverty-related offending.
fees, as well as stigmatisation. achievement of the Sustainable
The most popular option was to
For women in prison, there are Development Goals – including the
receive initial resources for the
greater chances of them losing reduction of poverty and gender
selling of cereals and groceries,
their home, livelihood, partner inequality – in a way that supports
and other businesses included
and access to their children. both desistance and sustainable
poultry farming and carpentry.
Therefore, efforts were focused on community development.
increasing the use of community The transformational impact of
service orders which allow for this development-led approach
prison to be avoided, and ensuring is illustrated in the case of one
that offenders are economically offender, who benefitted from an
empowered to lift them and their empowerment grant which saw
families out of poverty. Poverty is him receive a toolbox kit that
frequently cited as the reason for helped him secure employment as
minor offending in the country and a mason. Probation staff witnessed

6 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
THE REHABILITATION AND REINTEGRATION OF OFFENDERS IN THE ERA OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT

Conclusion
Many offenders are locked in rural communities, and they are ideas can be adapted elsewhere.
a vicious cycle of poverty and not empowered to achieve their Much can be achieved by
crime. To break this, criminal true potential. A development-led rethinking the challenges and by
justice actors and those working approach seeks to put people at investing our efforts in tackling
on development issues need to the centre and promote human difficult issues now, thus working
work more closely together to security and development. for a sustainable future.
address the vulnerabilities and Depending on the needs of the
disadvantages of the most at- individuals and local communities, RECOMMENDATION 17
risk groups. Reviewing the policy the development-led approach can States should develop criminal
objectives of crime prevention involve initiatives that foster skills justice and prison policies
and the treatment of offenders training to improve employment with full consideration of their
through a sustainable development opportunities, promote gender relevance and importance
lens can open up a space for equality, allow children to grow for achieving the Sustainable
stronger alignment of objectives up in safe environments in stable Development Goals of the 2030
and programming between and nurturing relationships, Agenda, so that ‘no one is left
behind’ and criminal justice
development and criminal policy, reduce violence against women
systems play their part to
and could change the way many and children, and shift damaging
contribute to a just, equitable,
crime and violence prevention cultural and social norms. tolerant, open and socially
strategies are oriented and inclusive world, in which the
There is no one-size-fits-all or
implemented in practice. needs of the most vulnerable
quick-win solution, but successful
The large majority of people in initiatives in one country and in one are met.
prison come from low-income context can spark consideration
urban neighbourhoods and poor of whether some of the underlying

Endnotes
All website links cited were accurate 3 Thailand Institute of Justice, Summary 7 Ernesto Cortés and Zhuyem Molina, Criminal
at the time of going to press in April 2018. report: The Bangkok Rules 7th Anniversary Record Reform in Costa Rica: A Step toward
Conference: “Beyond the Prison Walls: Proportionality and Improved Prospects
Multi-stakeholder Perspectives on Prisoner For Women’s Lives after Prison, Costa Rican
1 This Special Focus is based partly on Rehabilitation and Reintegration”, (only Association for Research and Intervention
discussions at the regional colloquium, available in Thai), held in Bangkok, Thailand, in Drugs (Asociación Costarricense para el
‘Empowering Vulnerable Communities 21 December 2017, www.tijthailand.org/ Estudio e Intervención en Drogas, ACEID)
and Women for Sustainable Development’, useruploads/files/2018/MAR/IBR_7anni_ and Washington Office on Latin America,
organised by the Thailand Institute of Summary_Report.pdf. 29 June 2017, www.wola.org/analysis/
Justice in partnership with the UN Office criminal-record-reform-costa-rica-step-
on Drugs and Crime, 25–26 January 4 Ibid.
toward-proportionality-improved-prospects-
2018, www.tijthailand.org/main/en/ 5 UNDP, Caribbean Human Development womens-lives-prison/.
content/569.html. Report 2012, Human Development and the
Shift to Better Citizen Security, 2012, p45. 8 Penal Reform International, Excellence in
2 ‘Thailand average monthly wages’, Trading Training on Rehabilitation in Africa (ExTRA)
Economics, 2017, tradingeconomics.com/ 6 Ibid. Project, Community service as an alternative
thailand/wages. to imprisonment: Pilot project final
evaluation, 2016.

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 |7
GLOBAL PRISON TRENDS
SPECIAL FOCUS 2018
The rehabilitation
and reintegration
of offenders in the
era of sustainable
development
Pull-out section

Penal Reform International Thailand Institute of Justice


www.penalreform.org www.tijthailand.org
Twitter: @PenalReformInt Email: info@tijthailand.org
PRISON MANAGEMENT

citing the Nelson Mandela Rules316 contact,318 as well as the introduction RECOMMENDATION 18
and the effects of the practice. of a policy on the elimination of In line with the Nelson Mandela
(See Canadian court rules prolonged solitary confinement by the Irish Prison Rules and the Bangkok Rules,
and indefinite solitary confinement Service.319 Finally, in the US, Texas states should prohibit both
unconstitutional, page 26). prisons ended the use of solitary indefinite and prolonged
confinement as a disciplinary measure, solitary confinement, as well as
In Ireland, new data has shown that
citing its lack of rehabilitative impact,320 for certain groups, as stipulated
the number of prisoners in 22 and
although the practice is retained as a in international standards. It
23-hour ‘restricted regimes’ fell to
measure to remove prisoners deemed should only be used as a last
nine in October 2017, from 211 in
problematic or potentially dangerous resort in exceptional cases,
July 2013.317 Factors in this shift
and nearly 4,000 prisoners remain in and then should only be applied
included an amendment to the Irish
solitary confinement.321 for the shortest time possible
Prison Rules, entitling all prisoners
to two hours out-of-cell time, with and be subject to regular,
opportunity for meaningful human independent review. (SDG 16)

Contact with
the outside world
The availability and forms of contact prison in the Netherlands has built a growing trend for video visits to replace
with the outside world by prisoners wing which includes a family room face-to-face contact visits with family
varies greatly from country to country. where fathers and children can play or and friends entirely.334
Evidence has shown that prison visits do homework together unsupervised.
The costly expense of making phone
and contact with family and friends They will also have the possibility to
calls was another area of concern
helps reduce recidivism. For example, use Skype to talk to their children
in the US. Following outrage from
a 2017 review by the UK’s Ministry at home.328
prisoners and their advocates, a
of Justice found that prisoners who
The allocation of prisoners far from price cap was introduced in 2015
receive visits from families or partners
their communities remains an issue. by a Federal Commission; however,
have a 39 per cent lower reoffending
The European Court of Human Rights in 2017 a court ruled that price limits
rate than those who have no visits.322
delivered a verdict that imprisoning for in-state calls (not out-of-state
Some innovative schemes for prisoners thousands of miles away calls) could not be imposed by the
enhancing family visits have been from their relatives in Russia violated Commission.335 In Germany, by
adopted recently. In Singapore, their right to family life.329 The Court contrast, the Constitutional Court
prisoners were encouraged to held that the distance between the ruled against the overpricing of phone
develop a closer relationship with penal facilities and the homes of the calls made by prisoners, saying that
their families during a four-hour-long prisoners’ families – ranging from disregarding the economic interests
‘Family Day’, where they mixed 2,000 to 8,000 kilometres – was so of prisoners violates their constitutional
freely instead of being separated by great that it had inflicted hardship. right to rehabilitation and that private
glass.323 Similarly, in Zimbabwe, ‘Family providers must offer phone services
Technology is increasingly used to
Weeks’ have been introduced to at fair market prices.336
facilitate contact with family and
promote closer relationships between
friends. A pilot in Bangladesh will
prisoners and families.324 An NGO RECOMMENDATION 19
allow prisoners to make calls to two
in Italy organised football matches
phone numbers twice a month,330 and States should facilitate contact
inside prisons for prisoners and their
France has announced that landline between prisoners and their
children, to promote more normal
phones will be installed in prison cells, family and friends through
and enjoyable visits.325 For the first
in recognition that contact with family regular, affordable and easy
time, open visits will be possible for
and particularly children is an important access to mail, telephones
women with children and pregnant
component of rehabilitation.331 and other communications,
women in Cambodia, following a new
as well as through visits
Ministerial regulation.326 In the UK, a voicemail system for
in a clean, respectful and
prisoners to regularly exchange
A privately-run prison in Wales safe environment.
messages with family and friends was
expanded a successful scheme in
evaluated – prisoners and families alike
which prisoners meet regularly with
said that it had a positive effect on
their child’s teacher to discuss their
health and wellbeing, relationships and
school work. This allows parents to
social ties, and the solving of practical
be informed of their child’s progress
problems.332 Video visitation continued
at school and can also reduce the risk
to be rolled out in the US. At least 600
of reoffending.327 Based on this same
facilities have it in place, although there
model of focusing directly on parents’
are concerns about the quality of the
relationships with their children, a
sound and picture,333 as well as the

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 | 27
PRISON MANAGEMENT

Rehabilitation
and reintegration
In recent years, fulfilling the A study that analysed data on nearly It outlines the benefits of such
rehabilitative purpose of prisons six million prisoners in the US found programmes, citing research findings
has become a higher priority. that by raising the minimum wage, that link education and vocational
This is demonstrated in political recidivism rates decreased.341 Another opportunities in prison with a reduction
commitments, such as the Doha report showed that criminal records in recidivism and an increase in
Declaration adopted at the UN Crime from offences committed more than employment post-release. The manual
Congress in 2015,337 and a number 10 years ago – many irrelevant to includes a set of checklists for prison
of creative measures adopted to assist the job applied for – were preventing administrations to use in developing,
in prisoners’ rehabilitation. former offenders from getting jobs.342 implementing and monitoring
rehabilitation programmes.
For instance, in the Indian state of There remains an issue with
Haryana, 600 cows will be provided providing the right vocational and
to six jails where prisoners will be skills training that will help prisoners RECOMMENDATION 20
responsible for their upkeep. The gain employment. For instance, in States should develop and
programme seeks to use the cows Canada, the Correctional Investigator implement individualised
(holy in the Hindu religion) to assist in criticised the type of skills training rehabilitation and reintegration
improving both the psychological and available to prisoners as it did not programmes that address
physical health of prisoners involved.338 match labour market demands, root causes of offending and
Psychotherapy (using theatrical preventing meaningful employment key barriers. Any skills and
drama) has been introduced across on release.343 It was also pointed out vocational training should take
China’s prisons to boost rehabilitation by the European Committee on the account of the employment
efforts.339 There is also a growing trend Prevention of Torture that all too often market to boost chances of
in prison university partnerships,340 ‘female prisoners are offered activities employment post-release.
which provide important education deemed “appropriate” for them (such Programmes for women should
opportunities for people in prison and as sewing or handicrafts), and are not reinforce gender stereotypes.
support better reintegration. excluded from far more vocational (SDGs 1, 4, 5, 8, 10 and 16)
training reserved for men’.344 (See Special Focus section)
Research demonstrates that
unemployment and low pay are key The UN Office on Drugs and Crime
barriers to reintegration for people has developed a new manual to
released from prison, and challenges assist prisons in developing effective
include criminal records and a lack rehabilitation programmes.345
of marketable skills.

Violent extremism
in prison
At national, regional and international including the underlying social and Violent Extremist Prisoners and the
levels, there is a continued interest in psychological dynamics behind Prevention of Radicalization to Violence
the management of violent extremist prisoner radicalisation, the dynamics in Prisons 347 from the UN Office on
prisoners, as well as policies to prevent of disengagement from violence by Drugs and Crime (UNODC) identifies
the radicalisation of prisoners and violent extremist prisoner groups or three crucial areas: prison staff training,
interventions to disengage violent gangs, and children who are violent risk management and rehabilitation
extremist prisoners and ensure their extremist offenders. It also found efforts, and concludes that full
social reintegration. Prisons are seen that there is a lack of evaluation of implementation of the Nelson Mandela
as places where prisoners are at risk prison and probation programmes Rules is the strongest approach. This
of radicalisation, but they are also aimed at extremist offenders and was also echoed by the Organization
recognised as environments where scarce understanding of challenges for Security and Co-operation in
there are significant opportunities that such prisoners face upon release Europe (OSCE), which states that one
for disengagement. from prison. of the ‘principal – and near-universal
– lessons is that prison overcrowding
A 2017 review of current research To address the relatively new
makes the situation worse, because
concluded that there are still challenges faced in this area, prison
it provides terrorists and radicalisers
glaring gaps in the understanding systems have exchanged information
with opportunities to spread their
of violent extremism in prisons.346 about interventions, and guidance
messages. Long before thinking
The study identified specific continues to be developed. The
aspects that need further analysis, Handbook on the Management of

28 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
PRISON MANAGEMENT

There remains
an issue with
providing the right
vocational and
skills training that
will help prisoners
gain employment

© Karla Nur, 2014

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 | 29
PRISON MANAGEMENT

about more ambitious schemes, safe circumstances, and there is no following a Ministry of Justice review
and orderly prisons should be every ‘one-size-fits-all’ solution for decisions in 2016 which found that extremism
government’s first priority’.348 around classification, segregation is a growing problem in prison,354
or dispersal, and rehabilitation there were plans to establish three
Other guidance that is underway
requirements. Furthermore, the specialist ‘separation centres’ to
includes a guide for detention monitors
UNODC Handbook stresses the hold prisoners charged or convicted
outlining how to address issues related
importance of being gender sensitive of terrorist-related offences, and a
to responses to violent extremism and
when undertaking risk assessments, taskforce of counter-terrorism experts
radicalisation in monitoring work. This
given the complexity of women’s was formed to advise and train
will be published in 2018 by the OSCE
involvement in violent extremism. prison staff.355 In Australia, plans were
and PRI.349
announced to upgrade an existing
Difficult decisions have to be
One of the main challenges in this prison to create a ‘Supermax II’ facility
made as to whether prisoners
area is how prison staff can accurately for ‘radicalised’ prisoners.356
categorised as ‘violent extremist’ or
identify violent extremist prisoners or
‘radicalised’ and those deemed ‘at Programmes on de-radicalisation,
those at risk of being radicalised by
risk’ of being radicalised should be disengagement and rehabilitation were
others. The European Organisation
integrated into the mainstream prison developed in many countries, and the
of Prison and Correctional Services
population or segregated. Some UNODC emphasised that these should
has compiled a list of existing training
countries moved towards increased not have a negative impact on the
materials for front-line staff and is
segregation, despite criticisms that delivery of rehabilitation programmes
finalising a screening tool that seeks
this can over-estimate the risks and to the ‘regular’ prison population.357
to assist prison staff of different levels
under-estimate the moderating effects A multi-disciplinary approach to
to detect so-called ‘vulnerable’ and
of exposure to other prisoners for rehabilitation has proved effective
‘radicalised’ prisoners as part of a
extremist prisoners. The Netherlands in many contexts. Theologians and
regional project.350
faced serious criticism for its policy of psychologists were deployed in
There are a number of specific risk concentrating extremist prisoners in Kyrgyzstan to work with radicalised
assessment tools that are in use in units where they were found to face prisoners,358 and in Italy, an agreement
some countries for violent extremist inhuman conditions and were held was made with the Union of Italian
offenders and those suspected of in de facto solitary confinement.352 Islamic Communities whereby Imams
being radicalised or of influencing France announced that 1,500 places make regular visits to prisons and train
others.351 It is generally accepted in separate prison wings will be set prison staff on how to accommodate
that each individual has to be up for what the government termed the needs of Muslim prisoners.359 The
assessed according to their particular ‘radicalised’ prisoners.353 In the UK, UN Mission in Somalia supported

What happens to Nepal, 16 prisoners were killed and


more than 90 injured when a prison
Prison authorities commonly respond
to natural disasters in an ad-hoc
prisoners during natural collapsed.361 In Haiti, during the chaos manner however, and further attention
disasters? following the earthquake in 2010,
eight police officers were found guilty
should be paid to building the capacity
of prisoners to act when disasters
Prisoners are entirely dependent on of murdering at least 20 prisoners they strike and to preventing risks. For
authorities to ensure their health said were attempting to escape.362 example, hazards should be taken into
and safety during natural disasters account when building prison facilities
Some countries have made progress and the allocation of keys should
such as tropical storms, earthquakes,
in adopting disaster risk reduction363 ensure prisoners can be evacuated in
floods and landslides. By virtue of
policies in prisons. These have a natural disaster.368 Prisons should
their detention they are unable to
included a focus on preventing also be systematically integrated into
evacuate to safer areas or access
hazards, reducing vulnerability, disaster risk reduction policies at local
basic supplies, and without adequate
and building upon the capacity and and national levels.
preparedness and planning they can
resilience of prisoners themselves
be at considerable risk. Their inherent
to respond to disasters. For instance, There are some initiatives to involve
vulnerability can be heightened when
a prison in Taiwan is self-sufficient prisoners in assistance during natural
prisons are badly constructed, have
on renewable energy,364 and in disasters, or in their aftermath. For
poor sanitation, are overcrowded, and
South Africa, prisons have access years, California’s prison system in the
have high proportions of ill, elderly,
to aquifers during droughts.365 In US has operated ‘conservation camps’,
disabled and illiterate prisoners.
the Philippines, new jails have been in which prisoners volunteer to
Fatalities and injuries have occurred built on embankments to prevent undertake manual labour like clearing
as a result of negligence/inaction flooding, and in a women’s prison brush to prevent forest fires or fighting
and abuse during emergencies. in a flood-prone area, prisoners have the fires themselves both inside of
For example, during and after been prepared through emergency the prison and in communities.369 This
Hurricane Katrina in 2015, thousands drills to respond rapidly in the initiative allows prisoners to learn new
of men, women and children were event of an evacuation.366 In New skills and spend time outside prison,
abandoned at the main prison in Zealand, beds are reserved in one and saves the state considerable
the US city of New Orleans. Power prison in case they are needed after spend.370 Following an earthquake in
was lost, and prison staff left whilst a natural disaster, although recently New Zealand in 2010, prisoners were
prisoners were stuck in locked cells the Department of Corrections involved in repairing, restoring and
with rising water levels.360 In the was forced to use these due to rebuilding houses, thereby learning
aftermath of the 2015 earthquake in increasing prisoner numbers.367 employable skills and contributing
to reconstruction efforts.371

30 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
PRISON MANAGEMENT

prison authorities with the rehabilitation There was growing interest in applying international standards
and reintegration of convicted former the treatment of children who regarding children in conflict with
Al-Shabaab or associated fighters are involved in violent extremism. the law, regardless of the severity
through psycho-social intervention and Following publication of the Neuchâtel of the offence.376
increased community engagement in Memorandum on Juvenile Justice
both the pre-release and post-release in 2016,374 which sets out key RECOMMENDATION 21
phases.372 In the US, there was standards and good practices
Implementation of the Nelson
reported success with an innovative in responding to children in a
Mandela Rules should be
programme for the rehabilitation of counter-terrorism context, further
prioritised in any strategy to
those convicted of violent extremist guidelines were issued by the Global
prevent radicalisation and
offences in Boston, Los Angeles Counterterrorism Forum focusing
violent extremism in prison.
and Minneapolis. The programme specifically on rehabilitating children
States should adopt individual
is intensive and individualised, and in detention convicted of violent
risk and needs assessments that
consists of counselling, philosophy, extremist offences.375 In 2017, the
are grounded in human rights.
literature and writing essays and UNODC published a comprehensive
Further research should be done
poetry, as well as close monitoring handbook on the treatment of children
on women-specific aspects
by authorities and restricted in the context of violent extremism
of radicalisation and violent
internet use.373 that reaffirmed the importance of
extremism. (SDGs 5, 10 and 16)

Fragile and
conflict-affected states
Fragile and conflict-affected states Liberia reported deteriorating prison In 2017, the UN Department of
continue to experience formidable conditions, and prisoners reported Peacekeeping Operations provided
challenges in administering effective overcrowding, no proper medication, support to national prison authorities
criminal justice and prison systems, inadequate food, limited toilet facilities in countries including the Central
including inadequate resources, a and a lack of access to courts.383 African Republic, Haiti, Darfur, Liberia
lack of political support, outdated and Somalia. In Libya, the UN mission
Prisons in conflict settings continued
legislation, weak infrastructure, established joint committees in prisons
to be used for arbitrary detention
overcrowding, corruption, the with high pre-trial rates in order to
and torture in breach of international
inability to prevent and respond to reduce the pre-trial population, which
law. There were reports from Human
violent incidents, and insufficiently stands at 75 per cent.391 In 2017,
Rights Watch that the United Arab
trained staff. PRI embarked on a programme
Emirates (UAE) had supported Yemeni
in the Central African Republic to
Overcrowding – which is forces in the arbitrary detention, forced
develop a strategy for demilitarisation
demonstrative of failing justice systems disappearance and torture of dozens
of the prison service in collaboration
– is a common feature in many states of people during security operations,
with the UN mission.392 In Somalia,
and can lead to fatalities. In Haiti, and that the UAE also runs at least two
the UN Mission has worked since
the country with the highest prison informal detention facilities.384 There
2016 to assist with reintegrating
occupancy rate in the world377 and were further accounts of atrocities
convicted high-risk prisoners through
an estimated 80 per cent of prisoners in Syria’s prisons, including against
disengagement programmes.393
in pre-trial detention, it was reported women specifically,385 and Amnesty
(See Violent extremism in prisons,
in early 2017 that many prisoners International reported that nearly
page 28).
were dying of malnutrition and mass 18,000 people had died in custody
funerals were being held.378 During a since the crisis began in 2011.386
riot in a prison in Papua New Guinea, RECOMMENDATION 22
In Libya, the criminal justice system
17 prisoners were shot dead amid International assistance,
has all but collapsed and prisoners are
allegations of overcrowding and severe including through UN
held in government-run and militia-run
shortages of food and resources.379 peacekeeping missions, should
facilities, often for long periods of time
give enhanced priority to the
In South Sudan a four-month-long without charge.387 UN reports on the
building of human rights-
strike by judges that paralysed the militia-run detention, which largely
based criminal justice systems.
criminal justice system resulted in house migrants, exposed a systematic
Priority should also be given
severe congestion in prisons, leading pattern of human rights abuses,388 and
to reducing prison populations
to the main prison in the capital, Juba, harsh conditions were also found in
through effective reforms
holding three times the number of government-run detention centres.389
of legislation and judicial
people than its official capacity.380 In Iraq, hundreds of so-called Islamic
processes. (SDGs 5, 10 and 16)
In Côte d’Ivoire, which has a prison State suspects, including children,
occupancy level of over 200 per were held in overcrowded jails without
cent,381 100 prisoners escaped from charge and foreign nationals were in
a prison.382 The Independent National legal limbo.390
Commission on Human Rights of

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 | 31
PRISON MANAGEMENT

Corruption
in prison
Corruption394 within prison systems Corruption perpetrated by prison are plans to use metal detectors,
has a whole range of negative staff tends to be common where CCTV and telephone jamming
consequences, not least on the human they are poorly paid and looking for equipment to prevent contraband
rights of prisoners and on effective supplemental income, and it flourishes entering prisons, as well as for staff to
prison management. It can prevent where there are inadequate oversight be subject to polygraphs (lie detector
prisoners from accessing basic and accountability mechanisms.398 tests).401 In Kazakhstan, the prison
services and divert public funds from Poor conditions of detention, service has adopted a multi-pronged
their intended purpose, and poses a particularly in overcrowded facilities, strategy to address corruption, which
severe security risk to prisoners, prison make it more likely that corrupt prison includes improvements to the system
staff and prison management alike. officers can extort payment from for electronic documentation and
prisoners for basic services. The UN establishing a telephone ‘hotline’
Corruption in prisons takes many
Subcommittee on the Prevention of for people to report corruption in
forms. Families may be required to
Torture reported on this issue and prisons.402 A similar ‘hotline’ initiative
pay bribes to prison staff merely for
recognised a correlation between has been set up in the Indian state of
their relative to receive basic provisions
corruption and torture, stating: Hyderabad, which also offers financial
such as food or access to showers.
‘corruption breeds ill-treatment, and rewards for information.403
A recent survey of 64,000 prisoners
disregard for human rights contributes
by Mexico’s statistics agency found
to the prevalence of corruption’.399 RECOMMENDATION 23
that as many as 87 per cent had paid
bribes to guards for food, for making In 2017, the UN Office on Drugs and States should prioritise
phone calls, or for getting a blanket Crime produced a Handbook on efforts to prevent and combat
or mattress.395 Furthermore, a 2017 Anti-Corruption Measures in Prisons corruption in prisons, starting
study in Armenia found that bribes which highlighted ‘[t]he inexorable link with recognising the problem,
were paid to prison officers by relatives between sound prison management adopting a zero-tolerance
of prisoners to ensure extra showers, and the prevention of corruption’.400 policy and undertaking a full
time outdoors for recreation, and less It sets out a range of anti-corruption corruption risk assessment.
thorough searches. The study found measures which include clearly Prison staff should be carefully
that such payments had increased acknowledging the issue, conducting selected and their remuneration
significantly over the past few years.396 a corruption risk assessment, and and working conditions should
developing a mitigation plan. Measures be adequate. (SDG 16)
There are also cases of staff covering
should include improving the integrity
up violations by their colleagues and
of staff (training, codes of conduct,
shielding them from investigation and
etc.), strengthening accountability
prosecution, and reports of prison staff
(detection, investigation and sanctions)
participating in the trafficking of drugs
and building transparency and
and mobile phones, embezzlement,
oversight (independent monitoring,
theft and assisting escapes. For
awareness and consultation).
instance, in Western Australia, the
Corruption and Crime Commission A range of strategies has been
found that prison staff were colluding adopted to prevent corrupt practices
to smuggle drugs into prisons.397 in prisons at the national level,
although it is still rife. In Jamaica, there

Independent monitoring prevention monitoring bodies


mandated to conduct regular visits
six members of its future NPM in
December 2017, after a lengthy
of prisons to all types of places where persons process;407 Chile signed a bill to
are deprived of liberty. Furthermore, establish an NPM;408 and Panama
The independent monitoring of
the Nelson Mandela Rules provide approved legislation creating their
prisons was given a significant
for a twofold system for regular NPM.409 However, progress on setting
boost when Sri Lanka and Australia
inspections: an internal inspection up an NPM remained stalled in the
ratified the UN Optional Protocol
by prison administrations, and Philippines410 and in Brazil, where only
to the Convention against Torture
external inspections conducted by two out of 27 states have established
(OPCAT) in December 2017, bringing
a body independent of the prison their own local mechanism required
the number of ratifications to a total
administration.405 by federal law.411 Resources remain
of 87 countries by the end of 2017.404
a barrier in detention monitoring
This opens up places of detention As of February 2018, 66 countries work; in 2017, the SPT noted that
to visits from the UN Subcommittee had designated NPMs406 and several a fund it uses to strengthen NPMs
on Prevention of Torture (SPT) and countries moved towards the full was significantly low, stressing how
establishes National Preventive functioning of their NPMs. Argentina critical it was that the fund remain
Mechanisms (NPMs) – torture confirmed designation of the last operational and well-resourced.412

32 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
ROLE AND USE OF TECHNOLOGIES

PART FIVE

Role and use


of technologies

In recent years, criminal justice and and Thailand. In August 2017, to conduct self-paced learning,422 and
prison systems around the world have Romania announced that EM was in New Zealand, all prisons now have
expanded their use of different kinds of being looked at to resolve prison secure computer suites that allow
technology to enhance community and overcrowding.415 Latvia adopted EM access to online learning tools for
prison-based surveillance of alleged for prisoners on parole in 2015 and is education, life skills, employment and
and convicted offenders. Technology planning to use EM as an alternative reintegration-focused training.423 In
is also used increasingly for different sentence to imprisonment.416 Colorado, people who were convicted
aspects of prison management, when they were children and who
There are concerns that EM use is
such as facilitating access to online have served at least 20 years of their
being expanded, despite a lack of
education and contact with family sentence are being prepared for
sufficient evaluation. A study in the US
and friends. release using virtual reality, in order
found that its use had increased nearly
to practise skills they have never
Concerns continued to be raised 140 per cent between 2006 and 2016,
learned, such as doing the laundry
about the growing use of technology, and gave a warning that this has
and food shopping.424
including the risk of privacy breaches occurred ‘largely in the absence of
and the unreliability of the technology data demonstrating their effectiveness Online access is also being used
itself. There are also concerns about for various types of offenders’.417 In the to allow prisoners to take control
whether enabling prisoners to have UK, academics concluded that ‘the of different aspects of their lives
remote contact with family, friends or evidence base does not match the directly from their cells. Belgium has
heath providers via screens – often ambitions for electronic monitoring’.418 invested in a comprehensive digital
on the grounds of cost-savings service called ‘Prison Cloud’, which
Technology was also increasingly
– will replace human contact, a is installed in prison cells and allows
used for surveillance inside prisons.
crucial aspect of rehabilitation and prisoners to access television, film and
South Korea began a six-month trial in
reintegration. (See Contact with the education provisions, to call family and
three prisons using unmanned drones
outside world, page 27). friends, and to book family visits.425
to patrol inside and outside of the
The Singapore Prison Service began
Prisons in the US, for example, are prisons, in order to monitor prisoners’
a trial for prisoners to share tablets
increasingly turning to ‘telemedicine’ movements and to trace fugitives.419
in their cells that are connected to a
to provide mental healthcare and Drones have also been used to drop
secure internal network, in order to
treatment.413 In a context of increasing contraband inside prisons and, in a
communicate with family, participate
staff shortages, this can make mental world first, the UK is trialling the use of
in online courses and read news
health support more accessible a device that can detect and deflect
and books.426
but has also been criticised by the packages that are dropped,420
practitioners for inhibiting the quality of as well as technology that can block One study 427 found that prisons with
care, not least because the technology signals from mobile phones being used such ‘self-service’ technology had
itself is not sufficiently reliable.414 in prisons.421 positive results. There was a reduction
in prison disciplinary offences, and
The use of electronic monitoring (EM) In high-income countries, there
reoffending in the first year after
continued to increase, not just in has been a rise in access to online
release was reduced by 5.36 per cent,
Europe and North America but in other education and training for prisoners.
compared to a 0.78 per cent reduction
countries such as Kenya, Kazakhstan, In Australia, prisoners have been given
in comparative prisons.
South Africa, the Maldives, El Salvador notebook computers that allow them

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 | 33
ROLE AND USE OF TECHNOLOGIES

There is concern that


remote contact with family
or friends via screens will
replace human contact

© Mikael
© Thailand
Karlsson
Institute
/ Alamy
of Justice,
Stock Photo.
2016

34 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
ROLE AND USE OF TECHNOLOGIES

The prisoner survey and usage data detainees have been detained legally, Although such video links may
suggested that prisoners felt more and a reporting function to notify the increase court efficiency, critics have
in control of their lives and more NGO of violations or concerns.429 urged caution and studies have found
confident in coping with technology In China, a court in Shanghai has that communication with courts or
in the outside world. Combating developed an online platform allowing lawyers via video links can reduce
prisoners’ digital exclusion is judges to review information sent understanding and participation, which
important, but concerns expressed directly from prisons when dealing with is worsened by inadequate audio and
included the fact that placing parole or commuting of sentences, visual quality.432
computers in cells can transform the thereby reducing the need to visit jails
dynamic of prisons, leading to more in person.430 RECOMMENDATION 24
isolation and fewer opportunities to
Although it is common practice for States should leverage
build constructive relationships with
child and vulnerable witnesses to give technology to improve
prison staff.428
evidence in court over video link in prisoners’ opportunities for
The criminal justice process has also certain countries, the use of video links education, skill‑building and
been affected by the introduction has expanded to include defendants communication, and to promote
of new technologies. In Malawi, an ‘attending’ court from police stations the efficiency of criminal
NGO introduced an application for and prisons, and for confidential justice systems. However, such
smartphones and tablets called ‘Open consultations with lawyers. A women’s initiatives should not reduce or
Trial’ that has information about fair trial prison in Chiang Mai in Thailand, for replace face-to-face interaction
and detention rights, a checklist that example, uses video-conferencing for for prisoners. (SDGs 4, 10 and 16)
people can use to determine whether court appearances which, it claims,
their friends, family members or has saved time and resources.431

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 | 35
ALTERNATIVES TO IMPRISONMENT

PART SIX

Alternatives
to imprisonment

Overall, the use of non-custodial non-custodial options. For example, General Assembly Special Session
measures and sanctions has in Cambodia – where 25,000 prisoners on the world drug problem. (See Drugs
expanded in recent years, particularly are in facilities designed to hold and imprisonment, page 14).
for low-level offending. This expansion 8,500, and there were almost 18,000
In Rwanda, community service was
has been driven by the recognition arrests of suspected drug traffickers
previously only available to people
of the importance of alternatives to and drug users in 2017 433 – the
convicted for crimes relating to
prison in reducing overcrowding and Justice Ministry announced a pilot
the genocide; however, in 2017
their effectiveness in rehabilitating programme of community service.434
the Government extended its use
offenders, particularly those who are This is an example of a trend to move
for offenders convicted of petty
convicted of non-violent and low-level towards alternative sanctions for
offences.435 In Morocco, where the
drug-related offences. drug-related offending, in line with
prison population is growing, a new
commitments made at the 2016 UN
A number of countries with prison Code of Criminal Procedure under
overcrowding sought to decongest consideration will include alternatives
prisons by introducing or expanding to prison at both pre-trial and
post-conviction stages.436 In Ireland,
there was a drop of almost 40 per cent
in the numbers of people being sent
New approach to with probation officers adopting a
more gender-sensitive approach.440
to prison in 2017, which was nearly
entirely caused by the introduction
probation and community While the project was implemented of non-custodial sanctions for
service for women in Kenya, a model was developed so
that the approach can be replicated
non-payment of court-ordered fines.437
Between 2015–17, Penal Reform in other countries. While there is no reliable data on the
International, together with the use of community sanctions at a global
A set of resources to assist
Kenya Probation and Aftercare level, evidence shows that there is
stakeholders in adapting their policy
Service, developed a new approach
and practice with women serving not necessarily a correlation between
to probation and community service
community sanctions include: reducing prison population rates and
for women, in a project funded by
the Thailand Institute of Justice. • A model for reform that lays increasing community sanctions. This
This project recognised the negative out 10 key steps to take in order is seen in European countries and the
consequences of imprisonment to introduce a gender-sensitive US, where there is a trend towards
experienced by women and their approach to community service and ‘mass supervision’ of offenders.
families, and the need to improve probation
and expand the use of community For instance, in the US there are
sanctions. The different needs • Lessons and recommendations
based on the study in Kenya on nearly five million people under a
of women serving non-custodial
experiences of women offenders criminal justice supervision (parole
alternatives have largely been
overlooked until now. and other stakeholders, and other or probation), a fourfold increase since
international research 1980.438 A study explains: ‘Probation
Within the project, the specificities and parole populations mushroomed
faced by women in serving probation In addition, a short documentary
film, a training module for probation alongside prison and jail populations,
and community service were
assessed through research. Based officers, and guidelines for social signalling that, with some exceptions,
on the UN Bangkok Rules on women investigations and pre-sentence community corrections was serving as
offenders, tools used by probation reports were produced, to facilitate an add-on, rather than alternative to,
officers were adapted and tested, sustainable change to Kenya’s
incarceration’.439
treatment of women offenders.441

36 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
ALTERNATIVES TO IMPRISONMENT

A number of countries
with prison overcrowding
sought to decongest
prisons by introducing or
expanding non-custodial
options

© Will Boase, 2015

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 | 37
ALTERNATIVES TO IMPRISONMENT

In Europe, the number of people At the international level, the Third A 2017 survey by the UN Office on
under some form of supervision has World Congress on Probation was Drugs and Crime in 31 countries
also grown significantly in almost held in Japan in September 2017. It found that victim-offender mediation
all jurisdictions in recent years. represented a positive sign of widening was the most commonly used type
Research found that of 29 European recognition of the value of probation of restorative justice, and more
countries, 17 have more people under and the necessity to cooperate and than half of the countries surveyed
supervision than in prison, and that the share experience. Furthermore, a used restorative justice in cases
increase has not led to a reduction in UN resolution called for greater use involving children in conflict with the
prison populations.442 of alternatives to imprisonment,446 law.449 However, it concluded that
acknowledging the links between restorative justice is ‘under-used
Furthermore, in some countries,
non-custodial sanctions and a or not well-known in many parts of
offenders are sent to prison for breach
reduction in prison overcrowding, the world’.
of the terms of their non-custodial
and the contribution they make to
sanction, rather than for reoffending.443 The Academy of Criminal Justice
building safer communities in support
Science has pointed out increasing
The importance of non-custodial of efforts towards the Sustainable
interest in understanding how
sanctions in promoting rehabilitation Development Goals. Notably, member
restorative justice processes might be
and reform was evidenced in a study states reaffirmed the importance of
used to respond to sexual harms and
from Australia, which found that proportionate sentences, in which
domestic violence. It has also noted
there was a reduction of between the severity of penalties for offenders
that ‘there continues to be barriers
11 and 31 per cent in the odds of is proportionate to the gravity of
to the uptake of restorative justice
reoffending for an offender who had the offences, and mitigating and
which are related to net-widening
been given a non-custodial sanction, aggravating circumstances are taken
effects, concerns about due process,
compared to an offender who received into account.447
lack of clarity about the identity of
a sentence of up to two years.444 In
The use of restorative justice is a restorative justice, lack of appropriate
Northern Ireland, a pilot programme
growing trend, whether as part of messaging to those interested in
which combined community service,
sentencing or initiated at other points retribution especially with respect
restorative justice and supervision also
of criminal justice proceedings. to accountability expectations in
had positive results. There was a 40
Restorative justice programmes restorative justice’.450
per cent reduction in the reoffending
include mediation, conciliation,
rate for those who completed the
conferencing and sentencing circles, RECOMMENDATION 25
order, leading to the pilot being
and are defined as any process in
considered for expansion.445 States should develop and
which the victim, offender and other
implement alternatives to
Recently there has been consideration relevant individuals or community
imprisonment, including
of how alternatives could be more members affected by a crime
restorative justice processes. A
effective and appropriate for women, participate together actively in the
focus should be on addressing
in line with the UN Bangkok Rules. resolution of matters arising from
root causes of crime, including
For example, in Kenya a PRI project the crime, generally with the help of
poverty and inequality, to
involved adapting tools used by a facilitator.448 Potential outcomes
support efforts to achieving
the country’s probation service to include protection of the victims’
the Sustainable Development
improve investigations into gender- rights and interests, unburdening the
Goals. Non-custodial sanctions
relevant aspects of women offenders. criminal justice system, lower rates
should replace the use of prison,
(See ‘New approach to probation of recidivism, and better reintegration
rather than widening the net
and community service for women’, of offenders.
of criminal justice control.
page 36).
(SDGs 1, 3, 4, 8, 10 and 16)

38 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
25 KEY RECOMMENDATIONS

25 Key
recommendations

01 05 08
States should introduce Sentencing practice States should review
a range of law and should be guided their drug policies
policy changes to by international law, in order to adopt
reduce rates of imprisonment, such including the UN Tokyo and Bangkok evidence-based policies that include
as crime prevention measures, Rules, and should be based on decriminalisation of minor offences,
the expansion of alternative the principle of proportionality. proportionality of sentencing,
measures, and a renewed focus Plea bargaining systems should be and non-custodial alternatives to
on rehabilitation in both prisons fully regulated to ensure access to imprisonment. Treatment as an
and community settings. justice is preserved and rights of alternative to imprisonment must be
suspects are upheld. (SDG 16) voluntary and human-rights compliant.

02
Strategies to address Metrics to measure the outcomes

06
prison overcrowding States should reduce the of drug policies should include their
should focus on crime use of life imprisonment, impact on human rights, health and
prevention, expanding the use of taking account of the development. (SDGs 3, 5 and 16)
alternatives to imprisonment and social principle of proportionality and the

09
interventions that promote sustainable negative impact of such sentences. The UN Bangkok Rules
development and reduce poverty and Life sentences without any possibility should guide states in
inequality. (SDGs 1, 10 and 16) of parole should be abolished. criminal justice reform
Conditions for life-sentenced prisoners to ensure systems meet the needs of

03
States should should adhere to the minimum women. Sentencing of women should
respect, protect and standards set out in the Nelson take account of any victimisation,
fulfil the full range Mandela Rules. (SDGs 8, 10 and 16) caretaking responsibilities and
of human rights and procedural context of the criminal conduct,

07
safeguards guaranteed for people States that retain the giving preference to non-custodial
arrested. To prevent torture or ill- death penalty should sanctions. (SDG 1, 5, 10 and 16)
treatment of suspects, investigative move towards abolition

10
interviewing that is non-coercive and establish a moratorium as a first Detention of children
should be adopted. (SDG 16) step. States that have abolished the should be used as a
death penalty should support the very last resort, and the

04
Pre-trial detention should abolition movement politically and death penalty and life imprisonment
only be used as a means financially. Conditions for prisoners should be prohibited for children.
of last resort, and on death row must meet minimum States should adopt child-friendly
decisions to detain should be based standards. (SDGs 3, 10 and 16) justice systems and protect children
on the presumption of innocence from violence and ill-treatment.
and the principles of necessity and (SDGs 3, 4, 5, 10 and 16)
proportionality. Monetary bail policies
should be reviewed to ensure they
do not discriminate against poor
people. (SDGs 1, 10 and 16)

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 | 39
25 KEY RECOMMENDATIONS

11 17 21
States should assess the States should develop Implementation of the
needs of elderly prisoners, criminal justice and Nelson Mandela Rules
including for rehabilitation, prison policies with full should be prioritised in
reintegration and healthcare, to consideration of their relevance any strategy to prevent radicalisation
inform prison regimes. Early release and importance for achieving the and violent extremism in prison. States
mechanisms should be adopted for Sustainable Development Goals of the should adopt individual risk and needs
elderly prisoners. (SDGs 10 and 16) 2030 Agenda, so that ‘no one is left assessments that are grounded in
behind’ and criminal justice systems human rights. Further research should

12
States should take play their part to contribute to a just, be done on women-specific aspects
measures to protect equitable, tolerant, open and socially of radicalisation and violent extremism.
LGBTI people in inclusive world, in which the needs of (SDGs 5, 10 and 16)
detention, in line with the Yogyakarta the most vulnerable are met.

22
Principles. Protection from violence International assistance,

18
and stigmatisation should be ensured, In line with the Nelson including through UN
without restricting rights, and adequate Mandela Rules and the peacekeeping missions,
healthcare must be provided, including Bangkok Rules, states should give enhanced priority to
hormone therapy and gender should prohibit both indefinite and the building of human rights-based
reassignment. (SDGs 5, 10 and 16) prolonged solitary confinement, as well criminal justice systems. Priority should
as for certain groups, as stipulated in also be given to reducing prison

13
States should collect data international standards. It should only populations through effective reforms
on the number of people be used as a last resort in exceptional of legislation and judicial processes.
in prison with disabilities, cases, and then should only be applied (SDGs 5, 10 and 16)
and review their needs in order to for the shortest time possible and be

23
inform policy and practice, in line with subject to regular, independent review. States should prioritise
international standards. This should (SDG 16) efforts to prevent and
include training of staff and policies combat corruption in

19
to protect discriminatory treatment States should facilitate prisons, starting with recognising the
and abuse, as well as architectural contact between prisoners problem, adopting a zero-tolerance
measures. (SDGs 10 and 16) and their family and policy and undertaking a full corruption
friends through regular, affordable risk assessment. Prison staff should

14
States should ensure and easy access to mail, telephones be carefully selected and their
the safety of prisoners, and other communications, as well as remuneration and working conditions
including through dynamic through visits in a clean, respectful and should be adequate. (SDG 16)
security and safeguards to uphold the safe environment.

24
absolute prohibition of torture. There States should leverage

20
should be adequate staff-prisoner States should develop technology to improve
ratios to guarantee the exercise of and implement prisoners’ opportunities
effective control of prison facilities. individualised for education, skill‑building and
(SDGs 10 and 16) rehabilitation and reintegration communication, and to promote the
programmes that address root efficiency of criminal justice systems.

15
States should protect causes of offending and key However, such initiatives should
prison staff from barriers. Any skills and vocational not reduce or replace face-to-face
discrimination and training should take account of interaction for prisoners. (SDGs 4,
violence, including gender-based the employment market to boost 10 and 16)
violence. Remuneration and chances of employment post-release.

25
working conditions should reflect Programmes for women should States should develop
the challenging nature of prison not reinforce gender stereotypes. and implement
work and encourage recruitment (SDGs 1, 4, 5, 8, 10 and 16) alternatives to
of female correctional staff. (See Special Focus section) imprisonment, including restorative
(SDGs 5, 8 and 16) justice processes. A focus should be
on addressing root causes of crime,

16
Drug prevention and including poverty and inequality,
treatment and HIV to support efforts to achieving the
prevention, treatment Sustainable Development Goals.
and care should be available to Non-custodial sanctions should
people in prison at the same level replace the use of prison, rather than
as that provided in the community. widening the net of criminal justice
Efforts to recruit sufficient healthcare control. (SDGs 1, 3, 4, 8, 10 and 16)
staff in prisons should be doubled.
(SDGs 3 and 10)

40 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
ENDNOTES

Endnotes

All website links cited were accurate at the 17 David Roodman, The impacts of 27 ‘Czech prisons filled up to overcapacity
time of going to press in April 2018. incarceration on crime, Open Philanthropy after respite’, Radio Praha, 2 January
Project, September 2017. 2018, www.radio.cz/en/section/
18 Institute for Criminal Policy Research, World curraffrs/czech-prisons-filled-up-to-
Prison Brief Database, www.prisonstudies. overcapacity-after-respite.
PART 1 org/highest-to-lowest/prison-population- 28 ‘Burundi frees prisoners, but rights
Crime and imprisonment total?field_region_taxonomy_tid=All. group cautious’, News 24, 23 January
19 Heather McGill, ‘Prisoner transportation 2017, www.news24.com/Africa/News/
1 International Centre for the Prevention of in Russia: travelling into the unknown’, burundi-frees-prisoners-but-rights-groups-
Crime, Trends in Crime and its Prevention, PRI Blog, 28 November 2017, cautious-20170123.
2016, Chapter 1. www.penalreform.org/blog/prisoner- 29 ‘Turkey’s justice ministry admits the severity
2 For example, see Europol, 2017 Internet transportation-in-russia-travelling-into-the- of prison overcrowding’, Birgun.net, 20 May
Organised Crime Threat Assessment unknown/. 2017, www.birgun.net/haber-detay/turkey-
(IOCTA), 2017, www.europol.europa.eu/ 20 ‘Mexico’s prison population has dropped, s-justice-ministry-admits-the-severity-of-
iocta/2017/index.html. but it’s a sign of a deeper criminal justice prison-overcrowding-160483.html.
3 UN Commission on Crime Prevention and problem’, Business Insider, 22 December 30 ‘Turkey boosting prison capacity to be able
Criminal Justice, Twenty-seventh session, 2017, uk.businessinsider.com/r-mexico- to jail 345,000 people in 5 years’, Turkey
14–18 May 2018, Note by the Secretariat on prison-population-drops-as-police- Purge, 11 December 2017, turkeypurge.com/
world crime trends and emerging issues and prosecutors-bungle-cases-2017-12. turkey-boosting-prison-capacity-able-jail-
responses in the field of crime prevention 21 Report of the United Nations High 345000-people-5-years.
and criminal justice, 2018, E/CN.15/2018/10. Commissioner for Human Rights, 31 ‘New prison planned to help ease the
4 Ibid. Non-discrimination and the protection of shortfall of prison places in Slovakia’,
persons with increased vulnerability in the The Slovak Spectator, 11 January 2018,
5 Ibid.
administration of justice, in particular in spectator.sme.sk/c/20735840/new-prison-
6 Roy Walmsley, Institute for Criminal Policy situations of deprivation of liberties and planned-to-help-ease-the-shortfall-of-prison-
Research, World Prison Population, 11th with regard to the causes and effects places-in-slovakia.html.
edition, 2016. of overincarceration and overcrowding, 32 ‘Nigerian govt to construct 6 ultra-modern
7 Roy Walmsley, Institute for Criminal Policy 21 August 2017, A/HRC/36/28. prisons nationwide’, PM News Nigeria,
Research, World Female Imprisonment List, 22 For example, see United Nations High 16 February 2018, www.pmnewsnigeria.
4th edition, 2017. Commissioner for Human Rights, Human com/2018/02/16/nigerian-govt-construct-6-
8 Roy Walmsley, Institute for Criminal Policy rights implications of overincarceration and ultra-modern-prisons-nationwide/.
Research, World Prison Population, overcrowding, 2015, A/HRC/30/19, para. 50. 33 Joëlle Bergeron, European Parliament
11th edition, 2016. 23 Seena Fazel et al, ‘Suicide in prisons: Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and
9 Ibid. an international study of prevalence and Home Affairs, Report on prison systems and
10 Ibid. contributory factors’, The Lancet Psychiatry, conditions, 6 July 2017 (2015/2062(INI)),
Volume 4, Issue 12, 2017, pp946–952. A8-0251/2017.
11 Frieder Dünkel, ‘The Rise and Fall of
Prison Population Rates in Europe’, 24 UN General Assembly, United Nations 34 European Court of Human Rights, Mocanu
Criminology in Europe, 2016, Standard Minimum Rules for Non-Custodial and Others v. Romania, application nos.
www.esc-eurocrim.org/images/esc/ Measures (The Tokyo Rules), 2 April 1991. 10865/09, 45886/07 and 32431/08,
newsletters/ESC_15_2_2016.pdf. 25 ‘Macedonia backs amnesty to deal with 17 September 2014.
12 ‘How do European Court judgments overcrowded prisons’, Business Insider UK,
influence detention conditions in 15 January 2018, uk.businessinsider.com/
Russia?’, EIN Voices, 12 December 2017, ap-macedonia-backs-amnesty-to-deal-
www.einnetwork.org/ein-voices/2017/12/12/ with-overcrowded-prisons-2018-1; Human
how-do-european-court-judgments- Rights Watch, World Report 2018, January
influence-detention-conditions-in-russia. 2018, p236 (Gambia); ‘Kuwait moves to
address prison overcrowding’, Gulf News,
13 Frieder Dünkel, ‘The Rise and Fall of 23 January 2018, gulfnews.com/news/gulf/
Prison Population Rates in Europe’, kuwait/kuwait-moves-to-address-prison-
Criminology in Europe, 2016, overcrowding-1.2161700.
www.esc-eurocrim.org/images/esc/
newsletters/ESC_15_2_2016.pdf. 26 ‘President directs release of petty
offenders’, Daily Nation, 15 February
14 ‘Dutch get creative to solve a prison 2017, www.nation.co.ke/news/president-
problem: Too many empty cells’, The New directs-release-of-petty-offenders/1056-
York Times, 9 February 2017, www.nytimes. 3814626-54f6g6z/; ‘Nigeria: National
com/2017/02/09/world/europe/netherlands- Stakeholders’ Committee and Task of Prison
prisons-shortage.html. Decongestion’, All Africa, 23 January 2018,
15 Roy Walmsley, Institute for Criminal Policy allafrica.com/stories/201801230654.html.
Research, World Female Imprisonment List,
4th edition, 2017.
16 Ibid.

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 | 41
ENDNOTES

PART 2 51 Amnesty International, Justice Under Trial: 69 Fair Trials, The Disappearing Trial: Towards
A Study Of Pre-Trial Detention In India, a rights-based approach to trial waiver
Trends in the use of imprisonment July 2017, pp12, 15. systems, 2017.
35 UN International Covenant on Civil and 52 American Civil Liberties Union, As Much 70 Dirk van Zyl Smit and Catherine Appleton,
Political Rights. Justice As You Can Afford – Hawaii’s Life Imprisonment: A Global Human
Accused Face an Unequal Bail System, Rights Analysis, Cambridge, MA: Harvard
36 Amnesty International, Justice Under Trial: January 2018. Also see Human Rights University Press (forthcoming 2018). The
A Study Of Pre-Trial Detention In India, Watch, Not in it for Justice: How California’s authors estimate that in 2014 there were
July 2017, p15. Pretrial Detention and Bail System Unfairly approximately 479,000 life-sentenced
37 ‘ASILEGAL presenta informe sobre Punishes Poor People, 2017. prisoners.
indígenas privados de libertad en Chiapas 53 ‘Bail reform wins final passage in 71 Ibid.
y Oaxaca’, ASILEGAL, 7 November 2017, Senate’, The CT Mirror, 7 June 2017,
asilegal.org.mx/index.php/es/noticias/658- 72 Ashley Nellis, Still Life: America’s Increasing
ctmirror.org/2017/06/07/bail-reform-wins- Use of Life and Long-Term Sentences, The
indigenassinjusticia-asilegal-presenta- final-passage-in-senate/; ‘50 Alabama
informe-sobre-indigenas-privados-de- Sentencing Project, 2017, p20.
cities reform bail practices for poor’,
libertad-en-chiapas-y-oaxaca. Criminal Legal News, 19 January 2018, 73 Ben Crewe, Susie Hulley and Serena Wright,
38 Human Rights Watch, World Report 2018, www.criminallegalnews.org/news/2018/ ‘The Gendered Pains of Life Imprisonment’,
January 2018, p89. jan/19/50-alabama-cities-reform-bail- British Journal of Criminology, Volume 57,
practices-poor/; ‘New York City to end cash Issue 6, 1 November 2017, pp1359–1378,
39 Keiji Soshohˉ oˉ (C. Crim. Pro.) Law No. 131 1376.
of 1948, revised in 2017, Art. 301–2, Art. 1 bail for non-felony cases in win for reform
of Additional Clause. advocates’, The Guardian, 10 January 2018, 74 Child Rights International Network, Inhuman
www.theguardian.com/us-news/2018/jan/10/ Sentencing: Life imprisonment of children
40 Judicial Department, Legal Aid Commission, around the world, March 2015, p7.
new-york-city-to-end-cash-bail-for-non-
Human Rights and Anti-Discrimination
felony-cases-in-win-for-reform-advocates. 75 Human Rights Council, Human rights in the
Commission and Director of Public
Prosecutions, ‘Pilot of the first hour 54 ‘Thailand weighs program to administration of justice, including juvenile
procedure and video recorded interviews’, ease bail process for the poor’, justice, 16 September 2015, A/HRC/30/L.16,
Joint press release, 2 May 2017, Benar News, 8 December 2017, para. 24.
odpp.com.fj/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/ www.benarnews.org/english/news/thai/bail- 76 Josh Rovner, Juvenile Life Without Parole:
Joint-Agency-Press-Release-on-Pilot- change-12082017114658.html. An Overview, The Sentencing Project, 13
Project_-May-2017.pdf. 55 ‘Liberia: Special judiciary task force October 2017.
41 ‘Committee against Torture reviews report of to review cases of pre-trial detainees’, 77 For example, see ‘Few Florida Juvenile
Paraguay’, Office of the High Commissioner AllAfrica, 16 October 2017, allafrica.com/ Lifers Resentenced Despite US Mandate’,
for Human Rights, 27 July 2017, stories/201710170326.html. US News, 31 July 2017, www.usnews.com/
www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/ 56 Human Rights Watch, World Report 2018, news/best-states/florida/articles/2017-07-31/
DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=21920&LangID=E. January 2018, p79. few-florida-juvenile-lifers-resentenced-
42 ‘Torture during interrogations not just wrong 57 ‘Colombia shortens court procedure despite-us-mandate.
but also counterproductive – UN rights chief’, to speed up collapsing justice system’, 78 The Campaign for the Fair Sentencing of
UN News, 22 September 2017, www.un.org/ Colombia Reports, 10 July 2017, Youth, States that ban life without parole
apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=57672#. colombiareports.com/colombia-reduces- for children, www.fairsentencingofyouth.
WnHZgWdLHIV; ‘Set universal standards criminal-proceedings-speed-collapsing- org/media-resources/states-that-ban-life/;
for interviewing detainees without coercion, justice-system/. Human Rights Watch, World Report 2018,
UN anti-torture expert urges States’, Office 58 ‘Aya Hegazy case spotlights Egypt’s pretrial January 2018, pp591–609 (USA).
of the High Commissioner for Human detention law’, Al-Monitor, 21 April 2017. 79 ‘Justice at Last for the Youngest Inmates?’
Rights, 18 October 2016, www.ohchr.org/ New York Times, 20 November 2017,
EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews. 59 ‘Study: Courts handing down fewer jail
terms’, Uutiset, 8 January 2018, yle.fi/uutiset/ www.nytimes.com/2017/11/20/opinion/life-
aspx?NewsID=20722&LangID=E. sentence-youth-parole.html.
osasto/news/study_courts_handing_down_
43 For example, see ‘Torture is never fewer_jail_terms/10011464. 80 For example, see European Committee for
the solution – a protocol for humane the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or
interrogations’, Association for the 60 ‘Chris Marshall: This is how long convicted
murderers spend in prison’, The Scotsman, Degrading Treatment or Punishment, 25th
Prevention of Torture, 27 January 2017, General Report of the CPT, April 2016, CPT/
www.apt.ch/en/news_on_prevention/torture- 8 November 2017, www.scotsman.com/
news/politics/chris-marshall-this-is-how- Inf (2016) 10, para. 71.
is-never-the-solution-a-protocol-for-humane-
long-convicted-murderers-spend-in- 81 ‘Prison conditions of inmates sentences
interrogations/.
prison-1-4607421. to life’, AKIPress, 19 December 2017,
44 Convention against Torture Initiative, akipress.com/news:600075/.
Investigative Interviewing for Criminal Cases: 61 Jacqueline Beard, Review of unduly lenient
sentences, House of Commons Briefing 82 Ashley Nellis, Still Life: America’s Increasing
Training Tool, 2017.
Paper Number 00512, 29 November 2017. Use of Life and Long-Term Sentences,
45 ‘Torture during interrogations not just wrong The Sentencing Project, 2017, p6.
but also counterproductive – UN rights chief’, 62 ‘Vast majority of sentences still have
no sentencing guidelines’, Irish Times, 83 Francis Karioko Muruatetu & Wilson Thirimbu
UN News, 22 September 2017, www.un.org/
10 January 2018, www.irishtimes.com/ Mwangi v Republic [Writ Petition No.15
apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=57672#.
news/crime-and-law/vast-majority- of 2015].
WnHZgWdLHIV.
of-offences-still-have-no-sentencing- 84 ‘Long sentences unconstitutional –
46 College of Policing Authorised Professional guidelines-1.3350342. Supreme Court’, New Era, 7 February 2018,
Practice, Investigative interviewing – PEACE
63 ‘NZ: three strikes law “silly”’, New www.newera.com.na/2018/02/07/long-
Framework, www.app.college.police.uk/
Zealand Herald, 1 November 2017, sentences-unconstitutional-supreme-court/.
app-content/investigations/investigative-
interviewing/#peace-framework. www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_ 85 European Court of Human Rights, Matiošaitis
id=1&objectid=11939273. and Others v. Lithuania, Application nos.
47 Asbjørn Rachlew, ‘From interrogating
64 ‘New bill proposes open jail’, My Republica, 22662/13, 51059/13, 58823/13 et al,
to interviewing suspects of terror:
19 January 2017, www.myrepublica.com/ 23 May 2017.
Towards a new mindset’, PRI Blog, 14
March 2017, www.penalreform.org/blog/ news/13331/. 86 All figures from: Amnesty International,
interrogating-interviewing-suspects-terror- 65 US Sentencing Commission, Federal Death sentences and executions in 2016,
towards-new-mindset. Alternative-to-Incarceration Court Programs, April 2017.
48 UN Commission on Crime Prevention and September 2017. 87 Ibid.
Criminal Justice, Twenty-seventh session, 66 Fair Trials, The Disappearing Trial: Towards 88 Amnesty International, Abolitionist and
14–18 May 2018, Note by the Secretariat on a rights-based approach to trial waiver retentionist countries (as of March 2018),
world crime trends and emerging issues and systems, 2017, www.fairtrials.org/wp- 5 March 2018.
responses in the field of crime prevention content/uploads/2017/12/Report-The- 89 Amnesty International, Mongolia: death
and criminal justice, 2018, E/CN.15/2018/10. Disappearing-Trial.pdf. penalty confined to history as new Criminal
49 Indicator 16.3.2 of the Sustainable 67 Figures cited in: Fair Trials, The Disappearing Code comes into effect, 1 July 2017;
Development Goals. Trial: Towards a rights-based approach to ‘Guatemala abolishes the death penalty
50 ‘Poor legal representation and prison trial waiver systems, 2017. for ordinary crimes’, World Coalition
decongestion’, The Guardian, 13 February 68 ‘149 jails in India overcrowded by over against the Death Penalty, 31 October
2018, guardian.ng/features/poor-legal- 200%: Govt’, Hindustan Times, 8 August 2017, www.worldcoalition.org/Guatemala_
representation-and-prison-decongestion/. 2017, www.hindustantimes.com/india- abolishes_the_death_penalty_for_ordinary_
news/149-jails-in-india-overcrowded- crimes.html.
by-over-200-government/story-
3MV1QjULTHwuLZuP4sfRpL.html.

42 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
ENDNOTES

90 ‘Gambia announces moratorium on death 106 For example, see The Global Commission on 119 For example, in Argentina, see David
penalty’, Reuters, 18 February 2018, Drug Policy, www.globalcommissionondrugs. Gagne, ‘Argentina to Expand Drug
www.reuters.com/article/us-gambia-justice/ org/about-usmission-and-history/; Treatment Program for Minor Crimes
gambia-announces-moratorium-on-death- ‘Tackling the world drug problem: Nationwide’, Insight Crime, 29 May 2017,
penalty-idUSKCN1G20V2. UN experts urge States to adopt human www.insightcrime.org/news/brief/argentina-
91 Gen Sander, Harm Reduction International, rights approach’, United Nations Office expands-drug-treatment-program-minor-
The Death Penalty for Drug Offences: Global of the High Commissioner for Human crimes-nationwide/.
Overview 2017, March 2018, pp6–7. Rights, 18 April 2016, www.ohchr.org/ 120 U.S. Department of Justice, Office of
EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews. Justice Programs, Drug Courts, May 2017,
92 ‘Kenyan Supreme Court declares Mandatory aspx?NewsID=19833&LangID=E.
Death Penalty Unconstitutional’, Death www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/238527.pdf.
Penalty Project, 14 December 2017, 107 Javier Sagredo, ‘UNGASS on Drugs: on 121 Inter-American Commission on Human
www.deathpenaltyproject.org/news/2903/ expectations, coherence and sustainable Rights, Measures to Reduce Pretrial
kenyan-supreme-court-declares-mandatory- development’, PRI Blog, 4 May 2016, Detention, OEA/Ser.L/V/II.163 Doc. 105,
death-penalty-unconstitutional/. www.penalreform.org/blog/ungass-drugs- 3 July 2017, p95.
expectations-coherence-sustainable-
93 ‘Thailand moves towards abolishing death development/. 122 For example, see ‘Joint Open Letter by the
penalty’, The Straits Times, 18 October 2017, UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention;
www.straitstimes.com/asia/se-asia/thailand- 108 ‘UN Human Rights Council reaffirms the Special Rapporteurs on extrajudicial,
moves-toward-abolishing-death-penalty. role of human rights in international drug summary or arbitrary executions; torture and
policy debate’, PRI News, 28 March 2018, other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
94 ‘Iran’s easing of drug laws could www.penalreform.org/news/un-human-
halt execution of 5,000 prisoners’, or punishment; the right of everyone to the
rights-council-reaffirms-role-of-human. highest attainable standard of mental and
The Guardian, 10 January 2018,
www.theguardian.com/world/2018/jan/10/ 109 Dave R. Bewley-Taylor and Marie Nougier, physical health; and the Committee on the
iran-ease-drug-laws-could-halt-execution- ‘Measuring the “world drug problem”: ARQ Rights of the Child, on the occasion of the
5000-prisoners-death-row. Revision. Beyond traditional indicators?’, United Nations General Assembly Special
Global Drug Policy Observatory Working Session on Drugs, New York’, 15 April
95 Gen Sander, Harm Reduction International, Paper No. 3, January 2018, p6. 2016, Office of the High Commissioner
The Death Penalty for Drug Offences: Global for Human Rights, www.ohchr.org/
Overview 2017, March 2018, p7. 110 UN Commission on Crime Prevention and
Criminal Justice, World crime trends and EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.
96 ‘Cabinet agrees to scrap mandatory death emerging issues and responses in the field aspx?NewsID=19828&LangID=E.
penalty for drug traffickers’, Malaysiakini, of crime prevention and criminal justice, 123 ‘Philippines: Duterte’s “Drug War”
7 August 2017, www.malaysiakini.com/ 2013, E/CN.15/2013/9, www.unodc. org/ Claims 12,000+ Lives’, Human Rights
news/391151#LcpDUFDvB0IUSXUI.99. documents/data-and-analysis/statistics/ Watch, 18 January 2018, www.hrw.org/
97 ‘Indonesian death penalty laws to be crime/World_Crime_Trends_2013.pdf. news/2018/01/18/philippines-dutertes-drug-
softened to allow reformed prisoners to 111 Outcome Document of the 2016 United war-claims-12000-lives.
avoid execution’, ABC News, 11 January Nations General Assembly Special Session 124 ‘Preliminary examination: The Philippines’,
2018, www.abc.net.au/news/2018-01- on the World Drug Problem, 19–21 April International Criminal Court, www.icc-cpi.int/
11/indonesia-to-soften-death-penalty- 2016, Our Joint Commitment to Effectively philippines.
stance/9320900. Addressing and Countering the World 125 ‘Duterte to withdraw Philippines from
98 Death Penalty Information Centre, The Death Drug Problem, 4 May 2016, A/RES/S-30/1, ICC after “outrageous attacks”’, Reuters,
Penalty in 2017: Year-end report, 2017. para. 4j, www.unodc.org/postungass2016. 14 March 2018, www.reuters.com/article/us-
99 Robin M Maher, ‘Moore v. Texas: US 112 France: ‘France to soften cannabis laws – philippines-duterte-icc/duterte-to-withdraw-
Supreme Court enforces constitutional but not legalise’, Yahoo! News, 23 January philippines-from-icc-for-violations-of-due-
prohibition against executing intellectually 2018, uk.news.yahoo.com/france-soften- process-idUSKCN1GQ0MA.
disabled defendants’, PRI Blog, 6 April 2017, cannabis-laws-not-legalise-155418579. 126 ‘Opioid Crisis Fast Facts’, CNN, 19 February
www.penalreform.org/blog/moore-v-texas- html; Georgia: Human Rights Watch, World 2018, edition.cnn.com/2017/09/18/health/
the-united-states-supreme-court/. Report 2018, January 2018, p242; Norway: opioid-crisis-fast-facts/index.html.
100 ‘Israeli death penalty advocates win ‘Norway votes to decriminalise drugs and
offer treatment instead of jail time’, i News, 127 Human Rights Watch, World Report 2018,
preliminary vote in parliament’, Reuters, January 2018, p593.
3 January 2018, www.reuters.com/article/ 16 December 2017, inews.co.uk/news/
us-israel-palestinians-deathpenalty/israeli- world/norway-votes-decriminalise-drugs- 128 ‘Jeff Sessions to crack down on
death-penalty-advocates-win-preliminary- offer-treatment-instead-jail-time/; Canada: legalized marijuana, ending Obama-era
vote-in-parliament-idUSKBN1ES1DT; Joan Bryden, ‘Canada: Liberal MPs urge policy’, The Guardian, 4 January 2018,
‘Philippines moves closer to reinstating dropping criminal penalties for all illicit drug www.theguardian.com/us-news/2018/jan/04/
death penalty’, The New York Times, 1 March use’, International Drug Policy Consortium, jeff-sessions-to-crack-down-on-legalized-
2017, www.nytimes.com/2017/03/01/world/ 19 January 2017, idpc.net/alerts/2018/01/ marijuana-ending-obama-era-policy.
asia/philippines-death-penalty.html. liberal-mps-urge-dropping-criminal- 129 Inter-American Commission on Human
101 ‘Erdoğan vows to reinstate death penalty penalties-for-all-illicit-drug-use; USA: ‘State Rights, Measures to Reduce Pretrial
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19 March 2017, www.independent.co.uk/ gov-data/state-marijuana-laws-map- 130 Inter-American Commission on Human
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an-death-penalty-turkey-referendum- 113 ‘48pc of prisoners linked to narcotic Detention, OEA/Ser.L/V/II.163 Doc. 105,
merkel-nazi-vote-a7638151.html; drugs’, Eleven, 28 February 2018, 3 July 2017, para. 200.
‘Maldives to restore death penalty after www.elevenmyanmar.com/local/13506. 131 Human Rights Watch, World Report 2018,
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22 August 2017, www.hindustantimes.com/ strategy?’, IDPC, 27 February 2018, idpc.
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net/alerts/2018/02/what-next-for-myanmar- Crime, World Drug Report 2017: Executive
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115 Human Rights Watch, World Report 2018, Implications, 2017, p13.
102 Human Rights Watch, Flawed Justice: January 2018, p559.
Accountability for ISIS crimes in Iraq, 2017. 133 United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime,
116 Department of Corrections of Thailand, World Drug Report 2017: Market Analysis
103 Human Rights Clinic, The University of Texas Prison population as of 1 March 2018, of Synthetic Drugs (Booklet 4), 2017, p33.
School of Law, Designed to Break You: www.correct.go.th/stat102/display/result_
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104 Centre on the Death Penalty, Death Penalty ‘A sprint through a year of drug policy and Caroline Udesen (eds), Prisons and
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105 United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Drug Policy Consortium, 15 January pp113–133.
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Declarations_2009-Declaration.html.

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 | 43
ENDNOTES

PART 3 149 Australian Human Rights Law Centre 165 ‘Justice chief targets Juvenile Law so
and Change the Record Coalition, 18-year-olds can be charged as adults’,
Prison populations Over-represented and overlooked: the crisis The Japan Times, February 2017,
of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2017/02/10/
135 Data collected by UNODC shows that women’s growing over-imprisonment, national/crime-legal/justice-minister-
young men are overrepresented in offender May 2017, p12. consults-panel-lower-age-criminal-
populations, particularly in countries with adulthood/#.WlOIMCOcYdX.
high homicide rates. See UN Commission 150 ‘End of mission statement by Dubravka
on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice, Šimonović, United Nations Special 166 ‘New facility for young offenders’,
Twenty-seventh session, 14–18 May 2018, Rapporteur on Violence against women, Phnom Penh Post, 20 September 2016,
Note by the Secretariat on world crime its causes and consequences, on her visit www.phnompenhpost.com/national/new-
trends and emerging issues and responses to Australia from 13 to 27 February 2017’, facility-young-offenders.
in the field of crime prevention and criminal Office of the High Commissioner for Human 167 Trinidad and Tobago Juvenile Court Project,
justice, E/CN.15/2018/10, 2018, para. 62. Rights, February 2017, www.ohchr.org/ Children Court System, www.jcp.tt/children-
EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews. court/system.
136 For example, in 2014 prisoners had a aspx?NewsID=21243&LangID=E.
median annual income of USD$19,185 168 ‘Good news from Italy - proposed legislation,
prior to imprisonment, 41 per cent less 151 Prison Reform Trust, Counted Out: Black, as described in the July 2017 Chronicle,
than non-incarcerated people of similar Asian and minority ethnic women in the is withdrawn by Italian Government’,
ages. See ‘Prisons of Poverty: Uncovering criminal justice system, 2017. International Association of Youth and Family
the pre-incarceration incomes of the 152 ‘Pregnant Women Will No Longer Await Judges and Magistrates, 14 August 2017,
imprisoned’, Prison Policy Initiative, 9 July Trial in Brazilian Jails’, Human Rights www.aimjf.org/storage/www.aimjf.org/Home/
2015, www.prisonpolicy.org/reports/ Watch, 23 February 2018, www.hrw.org/ Good_news_on_the_Italian_reform_AIMJF_
income.html. news/2018/02/23/pregnant-women-will-no- website_14_08_17.pdf.
137 For example, in the US, African Americans longer-await-trial-brazilian-jails. 169 ‘Child arrests in England and Wales fall by
represent 40 per cent of federal and state 153 ‘Pregnant Women and Mothers of Children 64 per cent in six years’, Howard League for
prison populations, while Hispanics make of Up to 12 Years of Age to Be Placed on Penal Reform, 7 August 2017, howardleague.
up 38 per cent of federal prison populations. House Arrest’, Folha de S.Paulo, 21 February org/news/childarrests2016/.
See: Drug Policy Alliance, The Drug War, 2018, www1.folha.uol.com.br/internacional/ 170 United Kingdom Ministry of Justice, An
Mass Incarceration and Race, 2016. en/brazil/2018/02/1957522-pregnant- analysis of trends in first time entrants to
138 ‘Denmark plans double punishment for women-and-mothers-of-children-of-up-to- the youth justice system, 2017.
ghetto crime’, BBC News, 27 February 12-years-of-age-to-be-placed-on-house-
arrest.shtml. 171 HM Inspectorate of Probation for England
2018, www.bbc.co.uk/news/world- and Wales, Annual Report, 2017.
europe-43214596. 154 See PRI’s resources on a gender-sensitive
approach to non-custodial sentences, 172 Royal Commission into the Protection
139 For example, in Canada, Aboriginal and Detention of Children in the Northern
adults in federal correctional services www.penalreform.org/resources/gender-
sensitive-approach-to-non-custodial- Territory, Report of the Royal Commission
accounted for 28 per cent of admissions and Board of Inquiry into the Protection
to custody and 26 per cent to community sentences/.
and Detention of Children in the Northern
supervision in 2015/2016. See Julie 155 Nischa Pieris, Reducing female incarceration Territory, 17 November 2017.
Reitano, ‘Adult correctional statistics in through drug law reform in Costa Rica,
Washington Office on Latin America, 2017. 173 ‘Council of Europe anti-torture Committee
Canada, 2015/2016’, Statistics Canada, p5,
publishes report on “the former Yugoslav
www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/85-002-x/2017001/ 156 Washington Office on Latin America, Republic of Macedonia”’, Council of Europe,
article/14700-eng.htm. Eliminating barriers to re-entry: Criminal 17 March 2016, www.coe.int/en/web/cpt/
140 World Prison Brief, Institute for Criminal record reform in Costa Rica, 2017. home/-/asset_publisher/UUNAR96HRvRO/
Policy Research, www.prisonstudies.org/ 157 ‘Female inmates in federal prisons will content/council-of-europe-anti-torture-
highest-to-lowest/foreign-prisoners?field_ now have more access to tampons and committee-publishes-report-on-the-
region_taxonomy_tid=All. pads’, Refinery29.com, 14 August 2017, former-yugoslav-republic-of-macedoni-
141 Roy Walmsley, Institute for Criminal Policy www.refinery29.com/2017/08/168010/ 2?&desktop=false.
Research, World Female Imprisonment List, bureau-prisons-free-tampons-pads-inmates. 174 Office of the Children’s Commissioner,
4th edition, November 2017. 158 Joëlle Bergeron, European Parliament State of Care 2017: A focus on Oranga
142 Ibid., p2. Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Tamariki’s secure residences, May 2017, p22,
143 Yenni Kwok, ‘More women are in Hong Home Affairs, Report on prison systems and www.occ.org.nz/assets/State-of-Care.pdf.
Kong’s prisons than anywhere else. They conditions, 6 July 2017 (2015/2062(INI)), 175 ‘Annex to the Press Release on the Visit’,
should be protected, not criminalised’, A8-0251/2017, p19. Organization of American States, 15
The Guardian, 31 August 2017, 159 ‘Are female prisoners left behind?’, December 2017, www.oas.org/en/iachr/
www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/ Daily Monitor, 19 February 2018, media_center/PReleases/2017/209A.asp.
aug/31/more-women-are-in-hong-kongs- www.monitor.co.ug/OpEd/Letters/Are- 176 United Nations Rules for the Protection
prisons-than-anywhere-else-they-should-be- female-prisoners-left-behind-/806314- of Juveniles Deprived of their Liberty (the
protected-not-criminalised. 4310210-o2pd1a/index.html. Havana Rules). Rules 63–65 state that ‘the
144 For more information see ‘About WOLA’s 160 Daniela Ancira, ‘La Cana, Mexico: providing carrying and use of weapons by personnel
Women, Drug Policies, and Incarceration female prisoners with employment and should be prohibited in any facility where
Project’, Washington Office on Latin reintegration opportunities’, PRI Blog, juveniles are detained’.
America, womenanddrugs.wola.org/about- 4 October 2017, www.penalreform.org/ 177 ‘Hundreds of Zambian children in prison
the-project/. blog/la-cana-mexico-how-prison-labour- with adults’, Lusaka Voice, 8 December
145 Inter-American Commission on Human programmes-with/. 2017, www.lusakavoice.com/2017/12/08/
Rights, Measures to Reduce Pretrial 161 ‘Op. Ed by Manfred Novak on the Global hundreds-of-zambian-children-in-prison-
Detention, OEA/Ser.L/V/II.163 Doc. 105, Study on Children deprived of Liberty’, with-adults/.
3 July 2017, para. 200. Global Study on Children Deprived of Liberty, 178 ‘Concern in Meru as child offenders
146 UN Human Rights Council, Report of the October 2017, childrendeprivedofliberty.info/ held in court cells with adults’, The Star,
United Nations High Commissioner for op-ed-by-manfred-novak/. 11 December 2017, www.the-star.co.ke/
Human Rights, Non-discrimination and 162 ‘Lawmakers scrap lowering age of criminal news/2017/12/11/concern-in-meru-as-child-
the protection of persons with increased responsibility’, Philippine Daily Inquirer, offenders-held-in-court-cells-with-adults_
vulnerability in the administration of justice, in 24 May 2017, newsinfo.inquirer.net/898945/ c1682922.
particular in situations of deprivation of liberty lawmakers-scrap-lowering-age-of-criminal- 179 Patricia Taflan, Children in Custody 2016–17:
and with regard to the causes and effects responsibility#ixzz4iC4mnr7O\. An analysis of 12–18-year-olds’ perceptions
of overincarceration and overcrowding, 163 ‘New York raises age of criminal of their experiences in secure training
21 August 2017, A/HRC/36/28, para. 13. responsibility in “lightning rod” centres and young offender institutions,
147 Aleks Kajstura, American Civil Liberties reform’, The Guardian, 10 April 2017, HM Inspectorate of Prisons, 2017.
Union and Prison Policy Initiative, Women’s www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/ 180 The International Covenant on Civil and
Mass Incarceration: The Whole Pie 2017, apr/10/new-york-raises-age-of-criminal- Political Rights and the Convention on
19 October 2017, p3. responsibility-teens-adult-prison. the Rights of the Child expressly forbids
148 Prison Reform Trust, “There’s a reason we’re 164 ‘Minimum age of criminal responsibility to capital punishment for offenders who
in trouble”: Domestic abuse as a driver to be increased’, Times Online, 17 February were under the age of 18 at the time of the
women’s offending, 2017, p7. 2018, www.sundaytimes.lk/article/1039446/ offences of which they were convicted.
minimum-age-of-criminal-responsibility-to- The prohibition on the execution of juvenile
be-increased. offenders is so widely observed that it has
attained the status of a peremptory norm of
international law.

44 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
ENDNOTES

181 ‘Iran: Shameful execution of man arrested at 195 United Nations General Assembly, Report of 213 European Court of Human Rights, Abele
15’, Amnesty International, 15 August 2017, the Independent Expert on protection against v. Latvia, Applications nos. 60429/12 and
www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2017/08/ violence and discrimination based on sexual 72760/12, 5 October 2017.
iran-shameful-execution-of-man-arrested- orientation and gender identity, 19 July 2017, 214 The Marshall Project, Why
at-15/. A/72/172, para. 30. Many Deaf Prisoners Can’t Call
182 ‘Somalia: Halt execution spree of children 196 Ibid. Home, 19 September 2017.
in Puntland’, Amnesty International, 197 International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans 215 American Civil Liberties Union, Caged In:
28 April 2017, www.amnesty.org/en/latest/ and Intersex Association, State-Sponsored Solitary Confinement’s Devastating Harm
news/2017/04/somalia-halt-execution-spree- Homophobia, 15 May 2017. on Prisoners with Physical Disabilities,
of-children-in-puntland/. January 2017.
198 Human Rights Watch, They have long
183 ‘Japan hangs two death row inmates, arms and they can find me, 26 May 2017, 216 ‘Settlement Removes Barriers for
including man who killed Chiba www.hrw.org/report/2017/05/26/they-have- Disabled State Prison Inmates’, Daily
family as a minor’, The Japan Times, long-arms-and-they-can-find-me/anti-gay- Business Review, 11 December 2017,
19 December 2017, www.japantimes.co.jp/ purge-local-authorities-russias. www.law.com/dailybusinessreview/sites/
news/2017/12/19/national/crime-legal/japan- dailybusinessreview/2017/12/11/settlement-
hangs-triple-murderer-man-minor-killed- 199 ‘Azerbaijan: Anti-Gay Crackdown’, Human
Rights Watch, 3 October 2017, www.hrw.org/ removes-barriers-for-disabled-state-prison-in
chiba-family-four. mates/?slreturn=20180008041137.
news/2017/10/03/azerbaijan-anti-gay-
184 Child Rights International Network, crackdown. 217 Mental Health Commission of New South
Inhuman Sentencing of Children in Kuwait, Wales, Towards a just system: mental illness
December 2017. 200 ‘Egyptian state wages unprecedented
arrest campaign against LGBTI individuals’, and cognitive impairment in the criminal
185 Child Rights International Network, Death Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, justice system, July 2017.
Penalty: Submission for the Secretary- 4 October 2017, eipr.org/en/press/2017/10/ 218 Human Rights Watch, “I Needed Help,
General’s Report on the Death Penalty, egyptian-state-wages-unprecedented-arrest- Instead I Was Punished”: Abuse and Neglect
30 March 2017. campaign-against-individuals-based-their. of Prisoners with Disabilities in Australia,
186 ‘Grab bars, handrails in some cells 201 United Nations Latin American Institute for February 2018.
as number of elderly prisoners rises’, the Prevention of Crime and the Treatment 219 Office of the Inspector General, U.S.
The Straits Times, 13 March 2017, of Offenders, Diagnóstico sobre la situación Department of Justice, Review of the
www.straitstimes.com/singapore/grab- de las personas LGBTI y otras poblaciones Federal Bureau of Prisons’ Use of Restrictive
bars-handrails-in-some-cells-as-number-of- en condición de vulnerabilidad privadas de Housing for Inmates with Mental Illness,
elderly-prisoners-rises. libertad en Costa Rica, 2017. July 2017.
187 ‘Australian jails face elderly sex offender 202 Center for American Progress and Movement 220 Amnesty International, Amnesty International
crisis’, ABC News, 15 September 2017, Advancement Project, Unjust: How the Report 2017/18, February 2018, p89.
www.abc.net.au/news/2017-09-15/ broken juvenile and criminal justice systems
australian-jails-face-elderly-sex-offender- 221 ‘South Africa: Law to Stop Detention
fail, August 2016, www.lgbtmap.org/file/lgbt- of Mentally Ill in Prisons’, AllAfrica,
crisis/8945030. criminal-justice-youth.pdf?ed2f26df2d9c416f February 2017, allafrica.com/
188 Prisons & Probation Ombudsman, bddddd2330a778c6=snbhhoobhb-sdlxdnyn. stories/201702100249.html.
Learning from PPO investigations: Older 203 ‘“Overwhelming” Number of Lesbians,
Prisoners, June 2017, www.ppo.gov.uk/ 222 ‘Pregnant Women Will No Longer Await
Bisexual Women Incarcerated’, NBC News, Trial in Brazilian Jails’, Human Rights
app/uploads/2017/06/6-3460_PPO_Older- 3 March 2017, www.nbcnews.com/feature/
Prisoners_WEB.pdf. Watch, 23 February 2018, www.hrw.org/
nbc-out/overwhelming-number-lesbians- news/2018/02/23/pregnant-women-will-no-
189 ‘Ratio of elderly ex-inmates returning to bisexual-women-incarcerated-n728666. longer-await-trial-brazilian-jails.
prison within 2 years rises’, Kyodo News, 204 ‘USA: California: State’s prisons struggling
November 2017, english.kyodonews.net/ 223 ‘Prisons Failing Mentally Ill, Especially
to overhaul gender-identity policies’, Women: Federal Ombudsman’, The
news/2017/11/d73393a09db5-ratio-of- San Francisco Chronicle, 5 August
elderly-ex-inmates-returning-to-prison- Epoch Times, 1 November 2017,
2017, www.sfchronicle.com/lgbt/ www.theepochtimes.com/prisons-failing-
within-2-years-goes-up.html. article/State-s-prisons-struggling-to- mentally-ill-especially-women-federal-
190 ‘The Obama administration’s plan to deal overhaul-11736669.php. ombudsman_2346726.html.
with elderly inmates isn’t working. Can it be 205 ‘Prison system sets up new
fixed?’, Washington Post, 5 September 2017, 224 Marayca López and Laura Maiello-
accommodations for LGBT inmates’, Reidy, ‘Prisons and the mentally ill: why
www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/ The Nation, 23 March 2017,
wp/2017/09/05/the-obama-administrations- design matters’, PRI Blog, 28 June 2017,
www.nationmultimedia.com/news/ www.penalreform.org/blog/prisons-and-the-
plan-to-deal-with-elderly-inmates-isnt- national/30309977.
working-can-it-be-fixed/. mentally-ill-why-design-matters/.
206 ‘Canada’s prison system overhauls
191 ‘Duterte to grant clemency to 127 sick, transgender inmate policy’, CBC News,
elderly prisoners’, Manila Bulletin, 25 January 31 January 2018, www.cbc.ca/news/politics/
2017, news.mb.com.ph/2017/01/25/duterte- transgender-inmates-csc-policy-1.4512510.
to-grant-clemency-to-127-sick-elderly-
prisoners/; Human Rights Watch, World 207 ‘In historic 1st, transgender inmate wins
Report 2018, January 2018, p35 (Argentina). transfer to women’s prison’, CBC News,
21 July 2017, www.cbc.ca/news/politics/
192 Prisons Inspectorate Scotland, Who fallon-aubee-transgender-inmate-1.4215594.
Cares? The Lived Experience of Older
Prisoners in Scotland’s Prisons, July 2017, 208 ‘Prison allows homosexual conjugal visit
www.prisonsinspectoratescotland. gov. for first time’, Times of Israel, 25 April 2017,
uk/sites/default/files/publication_files/ www.timesofisrael.com/prison-allows-
SCT03172875161.pdf; ‘Elderly inmate’s homosexual-conjugal-visit-for-first-time/.
death highlights lack of aging strategy in 209 Kseniya Kirichenko, International Lesbian,
Canada’s prisons’, CBC, 25 January 2017, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex
www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/ Association, United Nations Treaty Bodies:
seniors-in-jail-canada-1.3951603; ‘Prison References to sexual orientation, gender
Services needs strategy for dealing with identity, gender expression and sex
inmates with dementia, ombudsman says’, characteristics, November 2017.
British Journal of Family Medicine, August 210 The Yogyakarta Principles plus 10,
2016, www.gmjournal.co.uk/prison-services- Principle 9: Relating to the Right to Treatment
needs-strategy-for-dealing-with-inmates- with Humanity while in Detention, November
with-dementia-ombudsman-says; Human 2017, yogyakartaprinciples.org/relating-to-
Rights Watch, Old Behind Bars: The Aging the-right-to-treatment-with-humanity-while-
Prison Population in the United States, 2012. in-detention-principle-9/.
193 ‘Japanese Justice Ministry devises dementia 211 Human Rights Watch, “I Needed Help,
test’, Japan Times, 21 January 2018, Instead I Was Punished”: Abuse and Neglect
www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2018/01/21/ of Prisoners with Disabilities in Australia,
national/social-issues/japanese-justice- February 2018.
ministry-devises-dementia-test-elderly- 212 For a succinct overview of issues faced
inmates/#.Wng-1macb-Z. by prisoners with physical disabilities,
194 Human Rights Watch, Old Behind Bars: see United Nations Office on Drugs and
The Aging Prison Population in the United Crime, Handbook on Prisoners with Special
States, 2012. Needs, 2009.

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 | 45
ENDNOTES

PART 4: 237 See Amnesty International, Torture in 2014: 255 Council of Europe, European Committee on
30 years of broken promises, May 2014. Crime Problems, Council for Penological
Prison management Co-operation, 17th meeting of the Working
238 ‘Ending torture needs fresh commitment
from every UN Member State – UN experts’, Group, Strasbourg 22–24 January 2018,
225 ‘‘‘Screaming in terror’’: teen survivor PC-CP (2018) 2, 2018.
relives ordeal of Guatemala children’s OHCHR, 23 June 2017, www.ohchr.org/
shelter fire’, The Guardian, 22 November EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews. 256 ‘Prison staff in Scotland are attacked every
2017, www.theguardian.com/global- aspx?NewsID=21794&LangID=E. two days’, The Scotsman, 11 November
development/2017/nov/22/screaming- 239 Committee against Torture and Other 2017, www.scotsman.com/news/politics/
terror-teen-survivor-guatemala- Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or prison-staff-in-scotland-are-attacked-every-
childrens-shelter-fire. Punishment, Concluding observations on the two-days-1-4610518.
226 Human Rights Watch, World Report 2018, fifth periodic report of Sri Lanka, 27 January 257 India: ‘IS Suspect Attacks Prison
January 2018, p36. 2017, CAT/C/LKA/CO/5, para. 31. Guard’, Benar News, 4 December 2017,
240 Amnesty International, Report 2016/17: The www.benarnews.org/english/news/bengali/
227 Ibid., p418. jail-attack-12042017142718.html; Canada:
State of the World’s Rights, 2017, pp51, 198,
228 ‘Alabama Has Nation’s Most Violent Prisons, 225, 270, 312, 372. ‘Correctional officers violently assaulted at
and They’re Getting Worse’, Equal Justice Oliver jail’, Global News, 14 February 2018,
Initiative, 18 September 2017, eji.org/news/ 241 ‘Argentina: over five hundred prisoners globalnews.ca/news/4026784/correctional-
alabama-prison-violence-escalating-with- on hunger strike call for justice’, officer-violently-assaulted-at-oliver-jail/; US:
eight-homicides-in-2017. Prison Insider, 1 September 2017, ‘‘‘It’s a bloodbath”: staff describe life inside
www.prison-insider.com/en/news/argentine- America’s most violent prison’, The Guardian,
229 ‘Prison violence ‘‘unacceptable in a civilised plus-de-cinq-cents-prisonniers-en-greve-de-
country’’’, Radio NZ, 6 December 2017, 21 October 2016, www.theguardian.com/us-
la-faim-reclament-justice. news/2016/oct/21/holman-prison-alabama-
www.radionz.co.nz/news/national/345526/
prison-violence-unacceptable-in-a-civilised- 242 ‘96 Barberton prison “lifers” go on guard-speaks-out.
country. hunger strike’, News24, 12 January 258 South Africa: ‘Too Many Prisoners And Not
2018, www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/ Enough Warders Make A Violent Brew in
230 See United Nations Office on Drugs and News/96-barberton-prison-lifers-go-on-
Crime, World Drug Report 2017: Market South Africa’s Prisons’, Huffington Post,
hunger-strike-20180112; ‘Barberton Prison 27 December 2016, www.huffingtonpost.
Analysis of Synthetic Drugs, (Booklet 4), Inmates Hospitalised Due to Hunger Strike,
pp43–44, on violence in prisons associated co.za/2016/12/27/too-many-prisoners-and-
says Fellow Inmate’, Eyewitness News, not-enough-warders-make-a-violent-brew-
with synthetic cannabinoid use. 13 January 2018, ewn.co.za/2018/01/13/ in_a_21642660/.
231 Jacqueline Beard, Prison Safety in England barberton-prison-inmate-hospitalised-due-
and Wales, House of Commons Library to-hunger-strike-says-fellow-inmate. 259 ‘Prison officers permanently banned
Briefing, 5 December 2017. from striking after Government wins High
243 ‘UN expert concerned at condition of Court bid’, Independent, 19 July 2017,
232 ‘Philippines prison: Two dead in riot over prisoners on hunger strike in Iran’, United www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-
spilt water’, BBC, 4 November 2017, Nations Human Rights Office of the news/prison-officers-strike-ban-permanent-
www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-41870456; High Commissioner, 31 August 2017, industrial-action-home-office-high-court-
‘One Dead, Three Wounded in www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/ win-prison-officers-a7848346.html.
Nusakambangan Prison Riot’, Jakarta Globe, DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=22017&LangID=E.
8 November 2017, jakartaglobe.id/news/ 260 ‘Women working in male prisons face
244 ‘Iran: Mass hunger strike by political harassment from inmates and co-workers’,
one-dead-three-wounded-nusakambangan- prisoners in protest at inhumane conditions’,
prison-riot/; ‘Inmates death sparks riot The Washington Post, 27 January 2018,
Amnesty International, 22 August 2017, www.washingtonpost.com/local/social-
in Byculla women’s prison’, The Hindu, www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2017/08/
25 June 2017, www.thehindu.com/news/ issues/women-working-in-male-prisons-
iran-mass-hunger-strike-by-political- face-harassment-from-inmates-and-co-
cities/mumbai/inmates-death-sparks-riot- prisoners-in-protest-at-inhumane-
in-byculla-womens-prison/article19143262. workers/2018/01/27/21552cee-01f1-11e8-
conditions/. 9d31-d72cf78dbeee_story.html.
ece; ‘Three killed, four injured in Congo jail
mutiny’, Daily Nation, 30 December 2016, 245 Human Rights Watch, World Report 2018, 261 ‘£55k payout for breastfeeding Northern
www.nation.co.ke/news/africa/Three- January 2018, p169. Ireland prison officer driven to brink of
killed-four-injured-in-Congo-jail-riot/1066- 246 ‘Russia orders prison inmate on hunger strike suicide by bullying’, Belfast Telegraph,
3501830-dom2k2z/; ‘Riot breaks out at to pay his own medical costs’, The Journal, 9 November 2017, www.belfasttelegraph.
Pretoria prison’, Times Live, www.timeslive. 13 February 2017, www.thejournal.ie/russia- co.uk/news/northern-ireland/55k-payout-
co.za/news/south-africa/2017-07-02-watch- hunger-strike-3238339-Feb2017/. for-breastfeeding-northern-ireland-prison-
riot-breaks-out-at-pretoria-prison/. 247 Human Rights Watch, World Report 2018, officer-driven-to-brink-of-suicide-by-
233 ‘Prison fight leaves nine dead in Mexico’s January 2018, p278. bullying-36302549.html.
border city’, Reuters, 11 August 2017, 248 Amnesty International, Report 2017/18: 262 ‘More women urged to join prison service’,
www.reuters.com/article/us-mexico-prison/ The State of the World’s Human Rights, The New Times, 26 January 2018,
prison-fight-leaves-nine-dead-in-mexicos- 22 February 2018, p209. www.newtimes.co.rw/section/read/228385/.
border-city-idUSKBN1AR05D; ‘37 Die in 263 UNAIDS, Update on HIV in prisons and other
249 ‘Guantanamo detainee: US changed force-
Clash between Inmates, Police at Venezuelan closed settings, UNAIDS/PCB (41)/17.23,
feeding policy’, Al Jazeera, 15 November
Prison’, Latin American Herald Tribune, 23 November 2017.
2017, www.aljazeera.com/news/2017/11/
30 January 2018, www.laht.com/article.
guantanamo-detainee-changed-force- 264 ‘People in prisons and other closed settings’,
asp?ArticleId=2441889&CategoryId=10717;
feeding-policy-171115161210148.html. World Health Organization, www.who.int/hiv/
‘42 inmates injured in Medellin prison riot’,
Colombia Reports, 8 December 2017, 250 Committee against Torture, Concluding topics/prisons/en/.
colombiareports.com/42-inmates-injured- observations on the fifth periodic report 265 Presentation by Uganda Prison Service,
medellin-prison-riot/; ‘Two inmates seriously of Israel, 3 June 2016, CAT/C/ISR/CO/5, 10 March 2016.
injured in La Vega prison riot’, Dominican paras. 26–27. 266 ‘Bangladesh: 63 jails have no
Today, 1 August 2017, dominicantoday.com/ 251 World Medical Association Declaration doctors’, The Daily Star, 15 May 2017,
dr/local/2017/08/01/two-inmates-seriously- of Tokyo – Guidelines for Physicians www.thedailystar.net/frontpage/63-jails-
injured-in-la-vega-prison-riot/; ‘Two killed, Concerning Torture and Other Cruel, have-no-doctors-1405240.
several injured in riot at Guatemala prison’, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or 267 ‘Improve healthcare in prisons within two
CTV News, 20 March 2017, www.ctvnews. Punishment in Relation to Detention and years, Health Committee tells Scottish
ca/world/two-killed-several-injured-in-riot-at- Imprisonment, adopted by the 29th World Government’, Holyrood, 10 May 2017,
guatemala-prison-1.3331901. Medical Assembly, October 1975. www.holyrood.com/articles/news/improve-
234 ‘Rio de Janeiro violence: Hostages freed as 252 World Medical Association Declaration of healthcare-prisons-within-two-years-health-
prison riot ends’, BBC News, 19 February Malta on Hunger Strikes, adopted by the committee-tells-scottish-government.
2018, www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin- 43rd World Medical Assembly, November 268 ‘Suspected cholera cases in Yemen hit one
america-43109006. 1991, Principles nos. 11 and 14. million: ICRC’, Reuters, 21 December 2017,
235 ‘56 killed, many beheaded, in grisly Brazil 253 ‘Hunger strikes in prisons: The ICRC’s www.reuters.com/article/us-yemen-security-
prison riot’, Al Jazeera, 3 January 2017, position’, International Committee of the health/suspected-cholera-cases-in-yemen-
www.aljazeera.com/news/2017/01/60- Red Cross, 31 January 2013, www.icrc.org/ hit-one-million-icrc-idUSKBN1EF0ZH;
killed-beheaded-grisly-brazil-prison- en/document/hunger-strikes-prisons-icrc- see also PRI’s work (in Arabic only):
riot-170102185216472.html. position. www.yemen-media.info/news_details.
236 ‘GameChangers 2017: The Long Road to 254 22nd Council of Europe Conference of php?lng=arabic&sid=28831.
Prison Reform in Latin America’, Parker Directors of Prison and Probation Services, 269 ‘High alert over cholera outbreak in
Asmann, Insight Crime, 10 January 2018, Lillestrøm, Norway, 20–21 June 2017, Staff Kisumu’, Business Daily, 25 July 2017,
www.insightcrime.org/news/analysis/ selection, training and development in the www.businessdailyafrica.com/news/
gamechangers-2017-long-road-prison- 21st Century: Conclusions, 2017. counties/Fear-cholera-outbreak-Kodiaga-
reform-latin-america/. prison/4003142-4031974-pqcm3p/.

46 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
ENDNOTES

270 ‘Prisons in frantic bid to avert typhoid 283 ‘Missouri prisons to go smoke free after 298 For example, see joint report by the
outbreak’, Daily News, 20 January 2017, double-murderer wins in court’, The Department of Mental Health and Substance
www.dailynews.co.zw/articles/2017/01/20/ Kansas City Star, 22 September 2017, Abuse, World Health Organization, and
prisons-in-frantic-bid-to-avert-typhoid- www.kansascity.com/news/politics- the International Association for Suicide
outbreak. government/article174915201.html. Prevention, Preventing Suicide in Jails
271 United Nations Economic and Social 284 UK: ‘Spice use rise after HMP Cardiff and Prisons, 2007, p13, acknowledging
Council, Commission on Crime Prevention smoking ban’, BBC News, 16 January the ‘disproportionate’ amount of suicides
and Criminal Justice, Ensuring access to 2018, www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales- in segregation.
measures for the prevention of mother- south-east-wales-42703361; Canada: 299 ‘Suicide attempts have more than doubled
to-child transmission of HIV in prisons, ‘Federal prisons ban indoor smoking’, in Texas prisons’, Houston Chronicle,
E/CN.15/2017/L.5/Rev.1, 25 May 2017. CBC News, 12 July 2005, www.cbc.ca/ 5 February 2018, www.chron.com/news/
272 In 2016 there was USD$679,981,251 news/canada/federal-prisons-ban-indoor- houston-texas/article/Attempted-suicides-
given in philanthropic support to smoking-1.538713; Australia: ‘Victoria rise-sharply-in-Texas-prisons-12553728.php.
address HIV/AIDS, an increase from 2015. urged to rethink smoking ban in prisons 300 ‘South Africa: Probe into Two Solitary
See, Funders Concerned about AIDS, after violent riot’, The Guardian, 1 July 2015, Confinement Suicides in Western Cape
Philanthropic Support to Address HIV/AIDS www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2015/ Jail’, AllAfrica, 5 April 2017, allafrica.com/
in 2016, December 2017. jul/01/victoria-urged-to-rethink-smoking- stories/201704050011.html.
ban-in-prisons-after-violent-riot.
273 ‘Proposed U.S. Cuts to AIDS Funding Could 301 Open Society Justice Initiative and
Cause Millions of Deaths: Report’, Foreign 285 ‘Nicotine patches causing bullying and Amnesty International, Inhuman and
Policy, 1 December 2017, foreignpolicy. standovers at NZ prison: Ombudsman Unnecessary: Human Rights Violations in
com/2017/12/01/proposed-u-s-cuts-to- report’, New Zealand Herald, 2 August 2017, Dutch High-Security Prisons in the Context
aids-funding-could-cause-millions-of- www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_ of Counterterrorism, October 2017.
deaths-report-world-aids-day-hiv-global- id=1&objectid=11898058.
302 United Nations Committee against Torture,
health-pepfar-state-department-trump- 286 Michelle Baybutt, Catherine Ritter and Hein Concluding observations on the initial report
one-campaign/. Stöver, ‘Tobacco use in prison settings: of Lebanon, 30 May 2017, CAT/C/LBN/CO/1,
274 Uganda: Uganda Prison Service, a need for policy implementation’, in para. 22.
Sero-behavioural Survey, 2013; Zimbabwe: Stefan Enggist, Lars Møller, Gauden Galea
and Caroline Udesen (eds), Prisons and 303 United Nations Committee against Torture,
‘Zimbabwe prisoners deprived of ARVs’, Concluding observations on the combined
Bulawayo24 News, 24 September 2017, Health, World Health Organization, 2014,
pp138–147, 139. third to fifth periodic reports of the Republic
bulawayo24.com/index-id-news-sc-national- of Korea, 30 May 2017, CAT/C/KOR/CO/3-5,
byo-118414.html. 287 See Rule 45(2) of the Nelson Mandela Rules, para. 23.
275 Harm Reduction International, The Global which prohibits solitary confinement and
other similar measures for women, children 304 Ibid., para. 24; United Nations Committee
State of Harm Reduction, 2016, p19. against Torture, Concluding observations on
and prisoners with mental or physical
276 ‘Correctional Service Canada expands disabilities (when their conditions would be the initial report of Lebanon, 30 May 2017,
take-home naloxone kit program for exacerbated by such measures). Also see CAT/C/LBN/CO/1, para. 23, with reference
inmates’, CBC News, 13 July 2017, Rule 67 of the UN Rules for the Protection to: United Nations Standard Minimum Rules
www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatchewan/ of Juveniles Deprived of their Liberty for the Treatment of Prisoners (the Nelson
corrections-take-home-naloxone- (the Havana Rules). Mandela Rules), Rule 44.
kits-1.4202556. 305 Rule 67 of the UN Rules for the Protection
288 For example, as outlined in Sharon Shalev,
277 Thérése Lynn, ‘Launch of the evaluation of ‘Solitary Confinement as a Prison Health of Juveniles Deprived of their Liberty
the HSE Naloxone Demonstration Project’, Issue’, in Stefan Enggist, Lars Møller, Gauden (the Havana Rules).
Drugnet Ireland, Issue 60, Winter 2017, Galea and Caroline Udesen (eds), Prisons 306 ‘Authorities defend running of Perth
pp18–19; Moldova: Ina Tcaci, The impact and Health, World Health Organization, 2014, youth prison after allegations of torture’,
of adopting evidence-based HIV harm pp27–35. The Guardian, 16 January 2018,
reduction programs in prisons, UNODC, www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2018/
Presentation at the 25th International Harm 289 Dr Agnieszka Martynowicz and
Dr Linda Moore, ‘Behind the door’: Solitary jan/17/authorities-defend-running-of-perth-
Reduction Conference, Montreal, Canada, youth-prison-after-allegations-of-torture.
16 May 2017. confinement in the Irish Penal System, Irish
Penal Reform Trust, 2018. 307 AB v The Secretary of State for Justice,
278 Michelle Baybutt, Catherine Ritter and Hein 2017, EWHC 1694 (Admin).
Stöver, ‘Tobacco use in prison settings: 290 Ti Lamusse, Solitary Confinement in New
a need for policy implementation’, in Zealand Prisons, Economic and Social 308 United Nations Committee against Torture,
Stefan Enggist, Lars Møller, Gauden Galea Research Aotearoa, 2018, p4. Concluding observations on the fourth
and Caroline Udesen (eds), Prisons and 291 ‘Solitary confinement up 151% in five periodic report of Armenia, 26 January 2017,
Health, World Health Organization, 2014, years to 2016 – but prison population up CAT/C/ARM/CO/4, para. 37.
pp138–147, 138. only 16%’, 1 News Now, 29 January 2018, 309 ‘Ending Solitary for Juveniles: A Goal
279 For example, see Christina Hartwig, Heino www.tvnz.co.nz/one-news/new-zealand/ Grows Closer’, The Marshall Project,
Stöver and Caren Weilandt, Report on solitary-confinement-up-151-in-five-years- 1 August 2017, www.themarshallproject.
tobacco smoking in prison, European 2016-but-prison-population-only-16. org/2017/08/01/ending-solitary-for-juveniles-
Union Directorate-General for Health 292 Sharon Shalev, Thinking outside the Box? a-goal-grows-closer.
and Consumers, Drug policy and harm A review of seclusion and restraint practices 310 ‘Prisons see drop in solitary confinement
reduction, SANCO/2006/C4/02, April 2008, in New Zealand, New Zealand Human Rights use as vulnerable groups granted immunity’,
p12, www.ohrn.nhs.uk/resource/policy/ Commission, 2017, p26. The Globe and Mail, 7 August 2017,
TobaccoSmoking.pdf. 293 American Civil Liberties Union, Caged in: The www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/
280 Michelle Baybutt, Catherine Ritter and Hein Devastating Harms of Solitary Confinement prisons-see-drop-in-solitary-confinement-
Stöver, ‘Tobacco use in prison settings: on Prisoners with Physical Disabilities, 2017. use-as-vulnerable-groups-granted-immunity/
a need for policy implementation’, in article35897637/.
294 International Federation for Human
Stefan Enggist, Lars Møller, Gauden Galea Rights and Center for Prisoners’ Rights, 311 British Columbia Civil Liberties Association v.
and Caroline Udesen (eds), Prisons and United Nations Human Rights Committee Canada (Attorney General), 2018 BCSC 62,
Health, World Health Organization, 2014, (CCPR) – 121st session Joint submission para. 137.
pp138–147, 138. for the adoption of the List of issues, 2017, 312 Ibid., para. 250.
281 For example, see Christina Hartwig, Heino www.fidh.org/IMG/pdf/fidh_-_cpr_-_japan_-_ 313 ‘Prisons see drop in solitary confinement
Stöver and Caren Weilandt, Report on joint_submission_for_loi.pdf. use as vulnerable groups granted immunity’,
tobacco smoking in prison, European 295 Human Rights Watch, World Report 2018, The Globe and Mail, 7 August 2017,
Union Directorate-General for Health January 2018, p63; see also United Nations www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/
and Consumers, Drug policy and harm Committee against Torture, Concluding prisons-see-drop-in-solitary-confinement-
reduction, SANCO/2006/C4/02, April observations on the second and third use-as-vulnerable-groups-granted-immunity/
2008, www.ohrn.nhs.uk/resource/policy/ periodic reports of Bahrain, 29 May 2017, article35897637/.
TobaccoSmoking.pdf. CAT/C/BHR/CO/2-3, para. 20. 314 ‘Canada’s use of lengthy solitary
282 See World Health Organization, Health 296 United Nations Committee against Torture, confinement in jails is unconstitutional
in Prisons European Database (HIPED), Concluding observations on the second – judge’, The Guardian, 18 January
apps.who.int/gho/data/node.prisons.Smoke_ periodic report of Afghanistan, 12 June 2017, 2018, www.theguardian.com/
free_Cells?lang=en. CAT/C/AFG/CO/2, para. 29. world/2018/jan/18/canadas-use-of-
297 Lauri Love v. The Government of the United lengthy-solitary-confinement-in-jails-
States of America [2018] EWHC 172 at [119]. is-unconstitutional-judge.

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 | 47
ENDNOTES

315 ‘Press release: Federal Government appeals 334 For example, see ‘Louisiana’s Jefferson 348 Professor Peter R. Neumann, Countering
historic solitary confinement victory’, Parish moves to video-only inmate Violent Extremism and Radicalisation that
British Columbia Civil Liberties Association, visitation’, MuckRock, 2 October 2017, Lead to Terrorism: Ideas, Recommendations,
19 February 2018, bccla.org/news/2018/02/ www.muckrock.com/news/archives/2017/ and Good Practices from the OSCE Region,
press-release-federal-government-appeals- oct/02/LA-video-call/; ‘Mecklenburg jail visits Organization for Security and Co-operation
historic-solitary-confinement-victory/. are now solely by video. Critics say that in Europe, 29 September 2017.
316 British Columbia Civil Liberties Association v. hurts inmates, families’, Charlotte Observer, 349 ‘OSCE/ODIHR meeting explores importance
Canada (Attorney General), 2018 BCSC 62, 26 November 2017, www.charlotteobserver. of independent detention monitoring to
e.g. at para. 57. com/news/local/article185816728.html. protect human rights while preventing
317 Irish Penal Reform Trust, Census of 335 ‘Here’s What Happened After Trump’s violent extremism and radicalisation’, Penal
Restricted Regime Prisoners October FCC Got to Oversee Inmates’ Phone Reform International, 5 December 2017,
2017, www.irishprisons.ie/wp-content/ Service’, Huffington Post, 9 August www.penalreform.org/news/osceodihr-
uploads/documents_pdf/October- 2017, www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/ and-pri-meeting-explores-importance-of-
2017-Restriction.pdf. heres-what-happened-after-trumps- independent/.
fcc-got-to-oversee-inmate-phone-calls_ 350 Europris, RAN/Europris Staff Training
318 ‘Minister introduces Amendment to Prison us_598b6c83e4b0449ed5079bd4.
Rules: “Meaningful Human Contact”’, Irish Collection, www.europris.org/file/ran-
Penal Reform Trust, 7 July 2017, www.iprt.ie/ 336 ‘German court rules against training-collection/.
contents/3136. overpricing phone calls for prisoners’, 351 For example, see the Vera 2 instrument,
Reuters, 10 November 2017, www.reuters. the REM (Risk Assessment Extremism for
319 Irish Prison Service, Elimination of solitary com/article/us-germany-prison/german-
confinement: Policy document, 11 July 2017, Managing), and the ERG22+ (Extremism
court-rules-against-overpricing-phone-calls- Risk Guidance). See D. Elaine Pressman
www.irishprisons.ie/wp-content/uploads/ for-prisoners-idUSKBN1DS19V.
documents_pdf/Elimination-of-solitary- and John Flockton, ‘Violent Extremist Risk
confinement-Policy.pdf. 337 Thirteenth Congress on Crime Prevention Assessment: Issues and Applications of The
and Criminal Justice, Doha Declaration on Vera-2 in High-Security Correctional Setting’,
320 ‘Texas Prisons quietly end use of punitive Integrating Crime Prevention and Criminal in Andrew Silke (ed), Prisons, Terrorism and
solitary confinement’, Houston Chronicle, Justice into the Wider United Nations Extremism: Critical Issues in Management,
21 September 2017, www.chron.com/news/ Agenda to Address Social and Economic Radicalisation and Reform, January 2014.
houston-texas/article/Texas-prisons-quietly- Challenges and to Promote the Rule of Law
end-use-of-punitive-12217981.php. 352 Open Society Justice Initiative and
at the National and International Levels, and Amnesty International, Inhuman and
321 ‘Texas prisons stop using solitary Public Participation, Doha, 12–19 April 2015. Unnecessary: Human Rights Violations in
confinement as punishment’, 338 ‘“Cow therapy” to reform prison inmates in Dutch High-Security Prisons in the Context
Star-Telegram, 22 September 2017, Haryan’, Deccan Herald, 18 January 2018, of Counterterrorism, October 2017.
www.star-telegram.com/news/state/ www.deccanherald.com/content/654578/
texas/article174884131.html. 353 ‘France to seal off 1,500 radicalized inmates
cow-therapy-reform-prison-inmates.html. in prisons’, The Local France, 23 February
322 Lord Farmer, Importance of strengthening 339 ‘Chinese prison psychodramas help 2018, www.thelocal.fr/20180223/france-to-
prisoners’ family ties to prevent reoffending rehabilitate convicts’, Global Times, seal-off-1500-radicalized-inmates-in-prisons.
and reduce intergenerational crime, Ministry 3 August 2017, www.globaltimes.cn/
of Justice, 10 August 2017. 354 Ian Acheson, Summary of the main findings
content/1059418.shtml. of the review of Islamist extremism in prisons,
323 ‘A rare hug from daddy during special visit 340 Nina Champion, ‘Prison education: university probation and youth justice, Ministry of
to prison’, Straits Times, 8 October 2017, partnerships paving the way to successful Justice, London, 2016.
www.straitstimes.com/singapore/a-rare-hug- reintegration’, PRI Blog, 9 January 2018,
from-daddy-during-special-visit-to-prison. 355 ‘Press release: Dangerous extremists to
www.penalreform.org/blog/prison-education- be separated from mainstream prison
324 ‘Zimbabwe: Prisoners Enjoy Rare Quality university-partnerships-paving-the-way-to/. population’, Ministry of Justice, 21 April
Family Time’, AllAfrica, 6 October 2017, 341 ‘Raising the Minimum Wage 2017, www.gov.uk/government/news/
allafrica.com/stories/201710060384.html. Can Reduce Recidivism: Study’, dangerous-extremists-to-be-separated-
325 ‘Bars on the Windows, Laughter between The Crime Report, 8 February 2018, from-mainstream-prison-population.
the Lines’, New York Times, 15 December thecrimereport.org/2018/02/08/raising-the- 356 ‘Turnbull ministers welcome new NSW
2017, www.nytimes.com/2017/12/15/sports/ minimum-wage-can-reduce-recidivism- prison for radical inmates’, The Guardian,
soccer/soccer-prison-italy.html. study/. 11 June 2017, www.theguardian.com/
326 Departmental Instruction No.002, issued on 342 ‘“Irrelevant” criminal record checks harm australia-news/2017/jun/11/turnbull-
23 January 2018, information provided to ex-offenders’ job hopes’, The Guardian, ministers-welcome-new-nsw-prison-
Thailand Institute of Justice, February 2018. 25 November 2017, www.theguardian.com/ for-radical-inmates.
327 ‘Parc Prison to expand school parent uk-news/2017/nov/25/irrelevant-criminal- 357 United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime,
evenings to all inmates’, BBC News, record-checks-harm-job-hopes. Handbook on the Management of Violent
9 January 2018, www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk- 343 ‘Job training program for inmates stuck in Extremist Prisoners and the Prevention
wales-south-east-wales-42620686. prison watchdog’, CBC News, 27 January of Radicalization to Violence in Prisons,
328 ‘Leeuwarden prison experiments with 2017, www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ 2016, p137.
family space for fathers’, Dutch News, nova-scotia/prison-training-workforce- 358 ‘Kyrgyzstan implements UN de-radicalisation
30 October 2017, www.dutchnews.nl/ rehabilitation-inmates-1.3953592. programme for prisoners’, Caravanseri,
news/archives/2017/10/leeuwarden-prison- 344 European Committee for the Prevention of October 2017, central.asia-news.com/en_
experiments-with-family-space-for-fathers/. Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment GB/articles/cnmi_ca/features/2017/10/13/
329 European Court of Human Rights, Polyakova or Punishment (CPT), Factsheet: Women in feature-01.
and Others v. Russia, Application nos. prison, CPT/Inf(2018)5, January 2018, p3. 359 ‘Italy offers a glimpse of the international
35090/09, 35845/11, 45694/13 and 345 ‘Roadmap to a new chance: UN concern over violent extremism in prisons’,
59747/14, 7 March 2017. releases new guidance for prison-based LA Times, 24 April 2017, www.latimes.com/
330 ‘Convicts to receive mobile phone facilities rehabilitation’, United Nations Office on world/europe/la-fg-italy-prisons-extremists-
in prison’, Dhaka Tribune, 8 February 2018, Drugs and Crime, 1 December 2017, 2017-story.html.
www.dhakatribune.com/bangladesh/2018/02/08/ www.unodc.org/dohadeclaration/en/ 360 American Civil Liberties Union, Abandoned
convicts-mobile-phone-prison/. news/2017/12/roadmap-to-a-new-chance- and Abused, 2006.
331 ‘French prison cells to have landline un-releases-new-guidance-for-prison-based-
rehabilitation.html. 361 ‘Nepal releases more than 500 prisoners
phones in bid to improve rehabilitation’, as quake damages jails’, Hindustan Times,
The Telegraph, 2 January 2018, 346 Andrew Silke and Tinka Veldhuis, 29 May 2015, www.hindustantimes.com/
www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2018/01/02/ ‘Countering Violent Extremism in Prisons: world/nepal-releases-more-than-500-
french-prison-cells-have-landline-phones- A Review of Key Recent Research and prisoners-as-quake-damages-jails/story-
bid-improve-rehabilitation/. Critical Research Gaps’, Perspectives on GmVZwS2A2hdr4VYxPxYGZN.html.
332 Lauren Mumby and Professor Todd Hogue, Terrorism, Volume 11, Issue 5, 2017.
362 ‘8 Guilty for Prison Massacre in Rare Trial of
Prison Voice Mail: An Initial Evaluation, 347 United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Haiti’s Police’, New York Times, 19 January
University of Lincoln, August 2017. Handbook on the Management of Violent 2012, www.nytimes.com/2012/01/20/world/
333 ‘The end of American prison visits: jails Extremist Prisoners and the Prevention americas/7-haitian-policemen-convicted-in-
end face-to-face contact – and families of Radicalization to Violence in Prisons, 2011-les-cayes-prison-killings.html.
suffer’, The Guardian, 9 December 2017, 2016. Guidance was also produced by the
www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/ Council of Europe: Council for Penological
dec/09/skype-for-jailed-video-calls-prisons- Cooperation, Handbook for Prison and
replace-in-person-visits. Probation Services Regarding Radicalisation
and Violent Extremism, Council of Europe,
1 December 2016, PC-CP (2016) 2 rev 4.

48 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
ENDNOTES

363 The UN Office for Disaster Risk Reduction 379 ‘17 shot dead in Papua New Guinea prison 396 ‘“Rates” in Armenian Prisons Rising, While
defines disaster risk reduction as ‘aimed breakout’, The Telegraph, 15 May 2017, Issues Remain Unresolved, Report Says’,
at preventing new and reducing existing www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/05/15/17- E-press, 30 October 2017, epress.am/
disaster risk and managing residual risk, shot-dead-papua-new-guinea-prison- en/2017/10/30/rates-in-armenian-prisons-
all of which contribute to strengthening breakout/. rising-while-issues-remain-unresolved-
resilience and therefore to the achievement 380 ‘South Sudan prisons grapple with report-says.html.
of sustainable development’, UNISDR, congestion as judges strike’, African Indy, 397 ‘Corruption and Crime Commission
terminology: www.unisdr.org/we/inform/ 29 August 2017, www.africanindy.com/ investigation uncovers ease of getting drugs
terminology. news/south-sudan-prisons-grapple-with- into WA prisons’, The West Australian,
364 ‘Taiwan’s first solar power prison’, congestion-as-judges-strike-10989970. 9 December 2017, thewest.com.au/news/
Taipei Times, 8 February 2017, 381 World Prison Brief, Institute for Criminal wa/corruption-and-crime-commission-
www.taipeitimes.com/News/lang/ Policy Research, Cote d’Ivoire, investigation-uncovers-ease-of-getting-
archives/2017/02/08/2003664533. www.prisonstudies.org/country/cote-divoire. drugs-into-wa-prisons-ng-b88684958z.
365 ‘Cape Town faces Day Zero’, The Guardian, 382 ‘Land clashes test Côte d’Ivoire’s 398 Committee against Torture, Seventh annual
3 February 2018, www.theguardian.com/ fragile security’, IRIN, 25 October 2017, report of the Subcommittee on Prevention
cities/2018/feb/03/day-zero-cape-town- www.irinnews.org/news/2017/10/25/land- of Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or
turns-off-taps. clashes-test-cote-d-ivoire-s-fragile-security. Degrading Treatment or Punishment,
366 Emerald Group Publishing Limited, CAT/C/52/2, 20 March 2014, paras. 84,
383 ‘Liberia: “Appalling” Prison Conditions 85 and 91.
Reducing and Managing the risk of Disaster Unearthed’, AllAfrica, 27 April 2017,
in Philippine Jails and Prisons, Disaster allafrica.com/stories/201704270750.html. 399 Ibid., para. 72.
Prevention and Management Policy Brief 400 United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime,
Series #1, 2016. 384 ‘Yemen: UAE Backs Abusive Local Forces’,
Human Rights Watch, 22 June 2017, Handbook on Anti-Corruption Measures
367 ‘Prison inmate numbers hit all-time high www.hrw.org/news/2017/06/22/yemen-uae- in Prisons, 2017, p26.
in New Zealand’, News Hub, 9 February backs-abusive-local-forces. 401 ‘Correctional Officers to be polygraphed’,
2018, www.newshub.co.nz/home/new- Jamaica Gleaner, 28 February 2017,
zealand/2018/02/prison-inmate-numbers-hit- 385 Lawyers and Doctors for Human Rights,
Voices from the Dark: Torture and Sexual jamaica-gleaner.com/article/news/20170228/
all-time-high-in-new-zealand.html. correctional-officers-recruits-be-
Violence Against Women in Assad’s
368 United Nations Office for Project Services, Detention Centres, July 2017. polygraphed-prison-corruption-clampdown.
Technical Guidance for Prison Planning, 402 See PRI’s resources on addressing
2016, p35. 386 Amnesty International, Human
Slaughterhouse: Mass Hangings and corruption in prisons and the police in
369 ‘California inmates help battle raging Extermination at Saydnaya Prison, Syria, Kazakhstan, 2018, www.penalreform.org/
wildfires’, CNN, 18 October 2017, 7 February 2017. resource/briefing-papers-addressing-
cnn.com/2017/10/13/us/california-fires- corruption-in-prisons-and-the.
inmate-firefighters/index.html. 387 Human Rights Watch, World Report 2018,
January 2018, p343–352. 403 ‘Telangana prisons dept to reward Rs 10,000
370 ‘When Disaster Strikes, Inmates Can Move for info on corruption in jails’, Telangana
to the Front Lines of Community Response, 388 United Nations Support Mission in Today, 15 February 2018, telanganatoday.
Emergency Management, 25 September Libya/Office of the United Nations High com/telangana-prisons-dept-to-reward-rs-
2009, www.govtech.com/em/disaster/ Commissioner for Human Rights, Detained 10000-for-info-on-corruption-in-jails.
Inmates-Community-Response.html. and Dehumanised – Report on human
rights abuses against migrants in Libya, 404 The ratification status for OPCAT can
371 ‘Prison programme milestone celebrated’, 13 December 2016. be viewed online: Office of the High
Housing New Zealand, 31 January 2017, Commissioner for Human Rights, tbinternet.
www.hnzc.co.nz/news/latest-news/prison- 389 UNICEF, A Deadly Journey for Children: ohchr.org/_layouts/TreatyBodyExternal/
programme-milestone-celebrated/. The Central Mediterranean Migration Route, Treaty.aspx.
February 2017.
372 United Nations Department of Peacekeeping 405 The Nelson Mandela Rules, Rule 83.
Operations, Justice and Corrections Update, 390 ‘Iraq: Hundreds Detained in Degrading
Conditions’, Human Rights Watch, 13 March 406 For up-to-date information on designation
Issue 5, December 2017, peacekeeping. of NPMs, see Association for the Prevention
un.org/sites/default/files/justice_and_ 2017, www.hrw.org/news/2017/03/13/iraq-
hundreds-detained-degrading-conditions. of Torture, OPCAT Database, apt.ch/en/
corrections_update_-_december_2017.pdf. opcat-database/.
373 ‘“An incredible transformation”: how 391 United Nations Department of Peacekeeping
Operations, Justice and Corrections Update, 407 ‘Argentina: National mechanism to prevent
rehab, not prison, worked for a US Isis torture finally established’, 21 December
convert’, The Guardian, 4 January 2018, Issue 5, December 2017, p3, peacekeeping.
un.org/sites/default/files/justice_and_ 2017, apt.ch/en/news_on_prevention/
www.theguardian.com/us-news/2018/ argentina-national-preventive-mechanism-
jan/04/american-isis-abdullahi-yousuf- corrections_update_-_december_2017.pdf.
finally-established/.
rehabilatation. 392 For more information, see ‘PRI signs an
agreement to support demilitarisation 408 ‘Chile takes historic step on National
374 Global Counterterrorism Forum, Initiative Preventive Mechanism’, Association for
to Address the Life Cycle of Radicalization of the prison service in the Central
African Republic’, Penal Reform the Prevention of Torture, 12 June 2017,
to Violence: Neuchâtel Memorandum apt.ch/en/news_on_prevention/chile-
on Good Practices for Juvenile International, 5 February 2018,
www.penalreform.org/news/pri-signs-an- takes-historic-step-on-national-preventive-
Justice in a Counterterrorism Context, 2016. mechanism/.
agreement-for-central-african-republic/.
375 Global Center on Cooperative Security 409 ‘Panama’s National Preventive Mechanism
and the International Centre for 393 United Nations Department of Peacekeeping
Operations, Justice and Corrections moves towards implementation’, Association
Counter-Terrorism, Rehabilitating Juvenile for the Prevention of Torture, 4 May 2017,
Violent Extremist Offenders in Detention, Update, Issue 5, December 2017, p4,
peacekeeping.un.org/sites/default/files/ apt.ch/en/news_on_prevention/panama-
2016; Global Center on Cooperative moves-towards-the-implementation-of-the-
Security and International Centre for justice_and_corrections_update_-_
december_2017.pdf. national-preventive-mechanism/.
Counter-Terrorism, Correcting the Course:
Advancing Juvenile Justice Principles for 394 There is no internationally recognised 410 ‘Philippines: Strong government leadership
Children Convicted of Violent Extremism definition of corruption, but the UN required to set up National Preventive
Offenses, September 2017. Subcommittee on Prevention of Torture (SPT) Mechanism’, Association for the Prevention
describes it as being ‘broadly understood of Torture, 26 November 2017, apt.ch/en/
376 United Nations Office on Drugs and news_on_prevention/philippines-strong-
Crime, Handbook on Children Recruited as the dishonest misuse or abuse of a
position of power to secure undue personal government-leadership-required-to-set-up-
and Exploited by Terrorist and Violent national-preventive-mechanism/.
Extremist Groups: The Role of the Justice gain or advantage, or to secure undue
System, 2017. gain or advantage for a third party’. See 411 Oral statement made by the Association
Committee against Torture, Seventh annual for the Prevention of Torture at the UN
377 World Prison Brief, Institute for Criminal report of the Subcommittee on Prevention Human Rights Council, 36th Session,
Policy Research, www.prisonstudies.org/ of Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or September 2017, www.apt.ch/content/files/
highest-to-lowest/occupancy-level?field_ Degrading Treatment or Punishment, APTOralStatement_HRC36_BrazilUPR_
region_taxonomy_tid=All. CAT/C/52/2, 20 March 2014, para. 73. EN.pdf.
378 ‘AP Exclusive: Malnutrition 395 ‘9 of 10 inmates in Mexico say they bribed 412 Committee against Torture, Tenth annual
killing inmates in Haiti jails’, AP, prison guards’, Associated Press, 2 August report of the Subcommittee on Prevention
February 2017, www.apnews.com/ 2017, nationalpost.com/pmn/news-pmn/9- of Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or
a43ce17acfd0425cb2af90a1133a8418. of-10-inmates-in-mexico-say-they-bribed- Degrading Treatment or Punishment,
prison-guards. CAT/C/60/3, 3 April 2017.

Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018 | 49
ENDNOTES

PART 5
Role and use of technologies
413 ‘Turning to telemedicine for prisoners’ mental 420 ‘British prison is first to use “disruptor” 427 Cynthia McDougall, Dominic A. S. Pearson,
health treatment’, Modern Healthcare, to create drone-proof “shield” around David J. Torgerson and Maria Garcia-
January 2018, www.modernhealthcare.com/ jail’, The Telegraph, 16 May 2017, Reyes, ‘The effect of digital technology
article/20180106/NEWS/180109957. www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/05/16/ on prisoner behavior and reoffending: a
414 Ibid. british-prison-first-use-disruptor-create- natural stepped-wedge design’, Journal of
drone-proof-shield/. Experimental Criminology, December 2017,
415 ‘Romania could introduce electronic Volume 13, Issue 4, pp455–482.
monitoring to reduce prison overcrowding’, 421 ‘New tech to block mobile phones
Romania Times, 3 August 2017, in Scottish jails’, BBC, 14 November 428 EuroPris, How can ICT make the
www.romania-insider.com/electronic- 2017, www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk- offender better prepared for release?,
monitoring-prison-overcrowding/; scotland-41971718. September 2017.
Confederation of European Probation, 422 Helen Farley and Anne Pike, ‘Engaging 429 ‘Malawi to use the OpenTrial app for
‘Electronic monitoring implemented prisoners in education: Reducing risk and citizens to access the justice system’,
in Latvia’, 2017, www.cep-probation.org/ recidivism’, Advancing Corrections: Journal Next Web, 10 May 2017, thenextweb.com/
knowledgebase/electronic-monitoring/ of the International Corrections and Prisons syndication/2017/05/10/malawi-use-
electronic-monitoring-implemented-latvia/. Association, Volume 1, 2016, pp65–73. opentrial-app-citizens-access-justice-
416 PRI email communication with Probation 423 ‘Secure Online Learning now at all prisons’, system/#.tnw_IyuLu0nS.
Service of Latvia, 12 February 2018. National, 4 May 2017, www.national.org.nz/ 430 ‘China: online courts in judiciary’, Shanghai
417 Pew Charitable Trusts, Use of Electronic secure_online_learning_now_at_all_prisons. Daily, 17 January 2018, www.shine.cn/
Offender-Tracking Devices Expands Sharply, 424 ‘Using VR to teach inmates how to live on archive/metro/Online-courts-in-judiciary/
September 2016. the outside’, VICE, 27 December 2017, shdaily.shtml.
418 University of Leeds, Tracking people: news.vice.com/en_us/article/bjym3w/this- 431 Information provided by the Thailand
technological and methodological prison-is-using-vr-to-teach-inmates-how-to- Institute of Justice, February 2018.
challenges: Report of event three, live-on-the-outside. 432 Emma Rowden, Anne Wallace, David Tait,
15 June 2017. 425 EBO Enterprises, PrisonCloud, Mark Hanson and Diane Jones, Gateways
419 ‘South Korea to use drones to monitor www.ebo-enterprises.com/prisoncloud. to Justice: design and operational guidelines
prison inmates’, Korea Times, 6 June 2017, 426 ‘Inmates get mail from home on for remote participation in court proceedings,
www.scmp.com/tech/social-gadgets/ tablets’, Straits Times, 3 July 2017, University of Western Sydney, 2013;
article/2097089/south-korea-use-drones- www.straitstimes.com/singapore/inmates- Transform Justice, Defendants on video
monitor-prison-inmates. get-mail-from-home-on-tablets. – conveyor belt justice or a revolution in
access?, October 2017.

PART 6:
Alternatives to imprisonment
433 World Prison Brief, Institute for 440 Omar Phoenix Khan, ‘Eight things 445 ‘Northern Ireland: Keep out of jail order cuts
Criminal Policy Research, Cambodia, to remember when implementing re-offending rates’, BBC News, 3 August
www.prisonstudies.org/country/cambodia. a gender-sensitive approach to 2017, www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-
434 ‘2017 in review: Cambodia’s tumultuous probation’, PRI Blog, 17 July ireland-40808086.
year’, The Phnom Penh Post, 26 February 2017, www.penalreform.org/blog/ 446 Resolution adopted by the Economic
2018, www.phnompenhpost.com/national- eight-things-to-remember-when- and Social Council on 6 July 2017,
post-depth/2017-review-cambodias- implementing-a-gender/. Promoting and encouraging the
tumultuous-year. 441 To download resources and read more implementation of alternatives to
435 ‘Rwanda: More Convicts to Be Introduced about the project, see www.penalreform.org/ imprisonment as part of comprehensive
to Community Service Programme’, resources/gender-sensitive-approach-to- crime prevention and criminal justice
AllAfrica, 9 June 2017, allafrica.com/ non-custodial-sentences/. policies, E/RES/2017/19, 18 August 2017.
stories/201706090130.html. 442 Fergus McNeill and Kristel Beyens, 447 Ibid., Preambular Paragraph 11 and
436 ‘40 Per cent of Moroccan Inmates Held Offender Supervision in Europe, COST Operative Paragraph 3.
in Pre-Trial Detention’, Morocco News, Action IS1106 Final Report, March 448 Definition from: United Nations Office on
14 February 2018, www.moroccoworldnews. 2016, p6, www.cep-probation.org/ Drugs and Crime, A summary of comments
com/2018/02/240616/40-percent-moroccan- wp-content/uploads/Final-Report-COST- received on the use and application of the
inmates-held-pre-trial-detention/. Action-IS1106.pdf. Basic Principles on the Use of Restorative
437 ‘Drop in number of people jailed for not 443 Michelle S. Phelps and Caitlin Curry, Justice Programmes in Criminal Matters,
paying fines’, The Irish Times, 15 May 2017, Supervision in the Community: 22 May 2017, E/CN.15/2017/CRP.1.
www.irishtimes.com/news/crime-and-law/ Probation and Parole, April 2017, 449 Ibid.
drop-in-number-of-people-jailed-for-not- criminology.oxfordre.com/view/10.1093/
acrefore/9780190264079.001.0001/acrefore- 450 Academy of Criminal Justice Science,
paying-fines-1.3084187. Response to UNODC RE: ECOSOC
9780190264079-e-239?print=pdf.
438 Columbia University Justice Lab, Too big resolution 2016/17 of 26 July 2016,
to succeed: The impact of the growth of 444 New South Wales Bureau of Crime Statistics Response to the UNODC’s letter for
community corrections and what should and Research, Intensive correction orders comments dated February 2017.
be done about it, 29 January 2018. versus short prison sentence: A comparison
of re-offending, October 2017.
439 Ibid., p2.

50 | Penal Reform International and Thailand Institute of Justice | Global Prison Trends 2018
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