News

Changing jail culture

Posted: 15 April 2004 | Subscribe Online


For the first time social workers are being directly funded to work in young offenders institutions, potentially a seminal moment in the care and treatment of young people under 18 who are given custodial sentences. It is not the whole answer: further reform of sentencing policy, both in principle and in practice, is still required. Despite the prison service's ostensible mission to turn its inmates into law-abiding citizens, reoffending rates among young offenders remain high, thanks largely to overcrowding and a failure to provide the full range of opportunities for rehabilitation.
Article continues below the advertisement



But the Young Justice Board's announcement of funding for social workers in YOIs could help to change a prison service culture where, despite pockets of good practice, the focus is all too often on detention to the exclusion of all else. An important milestone was Mr Justice Munby's 2002 high court judgement that the Home Office had been wrong to deny that the Children Act 1989 applied in YOIs. In other respects, he said, policy on the treatment of juveniles complied with human rights obligations, though there was cause for "serious concern" whether that policy was actually being implemented throughout the prison service.

In an interview with Community Care last week, new YJB chair Rod Morgan admitted that conditions in some YOIs remained "unacceptable". While the YJB has emerged as an undoubted champion of young offenders in custody, it has not always received a sympathetic hearing in its host department, the Home Office, or for that matter in the prison service. One of the most intractable problems has been achieving consistency across the juvenile estate, bringing the standards of the worst up to those of the best. But this will require stronger leadership and greater resolve within the prison service than has been evident so far.
Article continues below the advertisement



It is against this background that penal reform campaigners have expressed reservations about the new money for social workers. More social workers are all very well, but will they get the support they need from their employing social services departments to make a difference?

And what about 18 to 20 year olds, who fall outside the remit of the YJB and for whom the outlook remains bleak?

The Munby judgement, and the Howard League for Penal Reform, which brought the case, allowed Children Act principles to play a role in prison life. Social workers are another indispensable part of the jigsaw. But it will take a great deal more time and effort before the jigsaw is complete.


Spread the word:   bookmark it! diggit! reddit!



Products and Services
  • RSS Feeds
  • Conferences
  • Jobs By Email
  • News
  • Blogss
  • Videos
  • Magazine Subscriptions
  • Podcasts