Penal harm refers to a form of punishment that posits that inmates should endure additional pain and suffering beyond just having their basic rights taken away. This concept encompasses a range of unpleasant and miserable conditions and injuries harsher than mere "deprivation of liberty". These are justified by a certain ideology regarding custodial sentences, which are mainly served in prison or a reformatory.[1][2][3]
Overview
editProponents of penal harm state that the purpose is to prevent offending in order to stop further penal harm.[4]
Traditional forms include:[citation needed]
- hard labor
- rationed, unappetizing or even unhealthy food
- various discomforts such as poor hygiene, small and overcrowded cells, hard bunks, insufficient protection against cold
- long isolation, even in a dark 'hole'
- sleep deprivation
- humiliating procedures such as strip searches
- prison rape
- denial of visits, correspondence and recreation.
Criticism
editThere is poor evidence to suggest that penal harm has a deterrent effect once an offender's imprisonment is over.[4] It forms a controversial appendage of a body of theory known as retribution; its perception as cruelty rather than justice may endanger both internal security and prospects for rehabilitation and goes against the humane ideal of most human rights advocates, possibly qualifying legally as inhumane punishment, an infringement on human rights under the UN rules.
Although internal punishments, imposed by prison authorities, are not strictly penal harm as such, since they are not independent from the convict's behavior, arbitrary application and choice of cruel modes, including corporal punishment (in South East Asian countries this can include the dreaded rattan caning), perfectly fit the rationale.
In the 1990s and 2000s, penal harm has taken (among other things) the form of poor health care for inmates;[5][6] this includes the denial of medicine for patients diagnosed with HIV/AIDS.[6][7]
Penal harm can also arise unintentionally, as a result of understaffing, insufficient budget, or even legal considerations (such as delays deemed necessary for appeal procedures).
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Clear, Todd R. (November 22, 1994). Harm in American Penology: Offenders, Victims, and Their Communities - Todd R. Clear - Google Boeken. SUNY Press. ISBN 9780791421741. Retrieved September 7, 2013.
- ^ Vaughn, MS (March 25, 2013). "Penal harm medicine: state tort remedies for delaying and denying health care to prisoners". Crime Law Soc Change. 31 (4): 273–302. doi:10.1023/a:1008332904378. PMID 16506338. S2CID 20138161.
- ^ "NCJRS Abstract - National Criminal Justice Reference Service". Ncjrs.gov. Retrieved September 7, 2013.
- ^ a b Cullen, F T (August 1995). "Assessing the Penal Harm Movement". Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency. 32 (3): 338–358. doi:10.1177/0022427895032003005. S2CID 143976063. Retrieved October 22, 2023.
- ^ Maeve, Katherine M., and Michael S. Vaughn. "Nursing with prisoners: The practice of caring, forensic nursing or penal harm nursing?." Advances in Nursing Science 24.2 (2001): 47-64.
- ^ a b Vaughn, Michael S.; Smith, Linda G. (1999). "Practicing penal harm medicine in the United States: Prisoners' voices from jail". Justice Quarterly. 16 (1): 175–231. doi:10.1080/07418829900094101.
- ^ Michael Welch (June 8, 2004). Ironies of Imprisonment. SAGE Publications. ISBN 978-1-4522-3739-8.