L9 - Custodial Sentancing Flashcards

1
Q

What is custodial sentencing

A
  • involves a convicted offender spending time in prison or another closed institution, such as a young offenders institute or psychiatric hospital
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2
Q

4 aims of prison

A

Deterrence
Incapacitation
Retribution
Rehabilitation

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3
Q

Deterrence

A
  • The unpleasant prison experience is designed to deter an individual from engaging in offending behaviour in the future.
    Deterrence works on two levels:
  • general deterrence aims to send a broad message to members of a society that crime will not be tolerated.
  • Individual deterrence should prevent the individual from repeating the same crime.
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4
Q

Incapacitation

A
  • offender is taken out of society to prevent them
    from reoffending as a means of protecting the public.
  • The need for incapacitation depends upon the severity of the offence and the nature of the offender
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5
Q

Retribution

A
  • Society is enacting revenge for the crime by making the offender suffer, and the level of suffering should be proportionate to the crime
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6
Q

Rehabilitation

A
  • Upon release, prisoners should be better adjusted and ready to take their place in society. - Prison should provide opportunities to develop skills, receive training or to access treatment programs for addiction, as well as receive counselling and have an opportunity to reflect
    on their crime
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7
Q

Psychological effects of custodial sentencing

A
  • psychological disorders
  • institutionalisation
  • brutalisation
  • labelling
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8
Q

Psychological disorders

A
  • Prisons have higher incidences of mental
    illnesses such as depression, anxiety, self-harm, suicide, and low self- esteem.
  • A study by the Prison Reform Trust (2014) found that 25% of women and 15% of men in prison reported symptoms of psychosis.
  • The oppressive prison regime can trigger psychological disorders.
  • Zimbardo’s (1973) ‘Stanford Prison Experiment’ demonstrated the psychological effects of imprisonment
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9
Q

Institutionalisation

A
  • Spending time in prison leads to a lack of autonomy, conformity to the role of prisoner and a dependency on prison culture.
  • Having adapted to the norms or routines of prison life, inmates may become so accustomed to these that they are no longer able to function on the outside.
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10
Q

Brutalisation

A
  • Prison acts as a school for crime and reinforces criminal lifestyle and criminal norms.
  • This leads to high recidivism, 70% of young offenders re-offend within two years.
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11
Q

Labelling

A
  • Prisoners often lose touch with previous social contacts and find it difficult to gain employment because they are labelled as a criminal.
  • This will all contribute to an increased likelihood of recidivism
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12
Q

Evaluation of custodial sentencing

A

strengths
- can be useful
weaknesses
- suicide rates
- selective about who goes to prison
- crime prevention
- review of custodial sentencing

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13
Q

Can be useful

A
  • Custodial sentencing can be useful. It shows that justice has been done and limits the danger to the public.
  • Many prisoners access education and training
    whilst in prison, increasing the chance they will find employment upon release.
  • Also, treatment programmes, such as anger management therapy and social skills training may help offenders modify their behaviour and so avoid reoffending.
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14
Q

Suicide rates

A
  • Suicide rates are 15% higher in the prison population than they are in the general population.
  • However, it is difficult to demonstrate that psychological disorders are caused by imprisonment.
  • Prisoners with psychiatric conditions may very well have had problems before they were institutionalised
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15
Q

Selective about who goes to prison

A
  • courts need to be selective about who they send to prison,
  • 8–10% of criminals commit 50% of all crimes (Peterson 1981).
  • Custodial sentencing is best reserved for these repeat offenders.
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16
Q

Crime prevention

A
  • Crime prevention is more effective than custodial sentencing because it avoids
    labelling a person as a criminal and also avoids the negative consequences of prison.
  • Alternative sentences, such as community service, are more effective for low-risk offenders because they can keep their social contacts and their job.
17
Q

Review of custodial sentences

A
  • David and Raymond (2000) completed a review of custodial sentencing and concluded that government ministers often exaggerate the benefits of prison in order to appear tough on crime.
  • They suggested that, in reality, prison does little to deter or rehabilitate offenders.
  • It is done to appease the public or as an act of retribution