Dictionary Definition
prison
Noun
1 a correctional institution where persons are
confined while on trial or for punishment [syn: prison
house]
2 a prisonlike situation; a place of seeming
confinement [syn: prison
house]
User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
- A place of long-term confinement for those convicted of serious
crimes.
- The cold stone walls of the prison had stood for over a century.
- Confinement in a prison.
- Prison was a harrowing experience for him.
- Any restrictive
environment, such as a harsh academy or home.
- The academy was a prison for many of its students because of its strict teachers.
Synonyms
- (place): jail, gaol (old-fashioned British). See .
- (confinement): imprisonment
Derived terms
- imprison
- prison camp
- prison cell
- prisoner
- prison guard
- prisonhouse
- prison officer
- prison record
- prison sentence
- prison warden
Translations
place of long-term confinement for those
convicted of serious crimes
- Arabic:
- Chinese: 监狱 (jiānyù)
- Croatian: zatvor
- Czech: vězení
- Danish: fængsel
- Dutch: gevangenis
- Faroese: fongsul
- Finnish: vankila
- French: prison
- German: Gefängnis
- Greek: φυλακή, δεσμωτήριο
- Hungarian: börtön
- Icelandic: fangelsi
- Italian: prigione, carcere
- Japanese: 監獄 (かんごく, kangoku), 刑務所 (けいむしょ, keimusho)
- Korean: 교도소 (gyodoso)
- Kurdish:
- Sorani: بهندیخانه, گرتوخانه
- Latin: carcer
- Polish: więzienie
- Portuguese: prisão
- Russian: тюрьма (tjur’má)
- Serbian: zatvor, tamnica
- Slovene: zapor , ječa
- Spanish: cárcel , prisión , penitenciaría
- Swedish: fängelse
- Telugu: జైలు (jailu), కారాగారం (kaaraagaaram)
- Ukrainian: в'язниця (vjaznýcja)
confinement in a prison
French
Noun
prison (plural: prisons)- prison (place, confinement)
Extensive Definition
A prison, penitentiary, or correctional facility
is a place in which individuals are physically confined or interned and usually deprived
of a range of personal freedoms.
Prisons are conventionally institutions, which form
part of the criminal
justice system of a country, such that imprisonment or
incarceration is a legal penalty that may be imposed by the
state for the commission
of a crime.
In popular parlance of many countries, the term
jail (gaol) is considered
synonymous with prison, although legally these are often distinct
institutions: typically jails are intended to hold persons awaiting
trials or serving sentences of less than one year, whereas prisons
host prisoners serving longer sentences.
A criminal suspect who has been charged
with or is likely to be charged with a criminal offense may
be held on
remand in prison if he or she is denied, refused or unable to
meet conditions of bail, or
is unable to post bail. This may also occur where the court
determines that the suspect is at risk of absconding before the
trial, or is otherwise a risk to society. A criminal defendant may also be held in
prison while awaiting trial or a
trial verdict. If found
guilty, a defendant will be convicted
and may receive a custodial sentence
requiring imprisonment.
Prisons may also be used as a tool of political
repression to detain political
prisoners, prisoners
of conscience, and "enemies
of the state", particularly by authoritarian regimes.
In times of war or conflict,
prisoners
of war may also be detained in prisons. A prison system is the
organizational arrangement of the provision and operation of
prisons, and depending on their nature, may invoke a corrections system. Although
people have been imprisoned throughout history, they have also
regularly been able to perform prison
escapes.
History
For most of history, imprisoning has not been a punishment in itself, but rather a way to lock up criminals until corporal or capital punishment. There were prisons used for detention in Jerusalem in Old Testament times. Dungeons were used to hold prisoners; those who were not killed or left to die there often became galley slaves or faced penal transportations. In other cases debtors were often thrown into debtor's prisons, until they paid their jailers enough money in exchange for a limited degree of freedom. Only in the 19th century did prisons as we know them today become commonplace.The first "modern" prisons of the early 19th
Century were sometimes known by the term "penitentiary" (a term
still used by some prisons in the USA today): as the name suggests,
the goal of these facilities was that of penance by the prisoners,
through a regimen of strict disciplines, silent reflections, and
maybe forced labor on treadwheels and the like.
This "Auburn
system" of prisoner management was often reinforced by
elaborate prison architectures, such as the separate
system and the panopticon. It was not until
the late 19th Century did rehabilitation through education and
skilled labor become the standard goal of prisons.
Design and facilities
Male and female prisoners are typically kept in separate locations or separate prisons altogether. Prison accommodation, especially modern prisons in the developed world, are often divided into wings. A building holding more than one wing is known as a "hall".Amongst the facilities that prisons may have are:
- A main entrance, which may be known as the 'gatelodge' or 'sally port' (stemming from old castle nomenclature)
- A chapel, mosque or other religious facility, which will often house chaplaincy offices and facilities for counselling of individuals or groups
- An 'education facility', often including a library, providing adult education or continuing education opportunities
- A gym or an exercise yard, a fenced, usually open-air-area which prisoners may use for recreational and exercise purposes
- A healthcare facility or hospital
- A segregation unit (also called a 'block' or 'isolation cell'), used to separate unruly, dangerous, or vulnerable prisoners from the general population, also sometimes used as punishment (see solitary confinement)
- A section of vulnerable prisoners (VPs), or protective Custody (PC) units, used to accommodate prisoners classified as vulnerable, such as sex offenders, former police officers, informants, and those that have gotten into debt or trouble with other prisoners
- A section of safe cells, used to keep prisoners under constant visual observation, for example when considered at risk of suicide
- A visiting area, where prisoners may be allowed restricted contact with relatives, friends, lawyers, or other people
- A death row in some prisons, a section for criminals awaiting execution
- A staff accommodation area, where staff and guards live in the prison, typical of historical prisons
- A service/facilities area housing support facilities like kitchens
- Industrial or agricultural plants operated with convict labour
- A recreational area consisting of a TV and pool table
Prisons are normally surrounded by fencing,
walls, earthworks, geographical features, or other barriers to
prevent escape. Multiple barriers, concertina
wire, electrified
fencing, secured and defensible main gates, armed guard towers,
lighting, motion sensors, dogs, and
roving patrols may all also be present depending on the level of
security. Remotely controlled doors, CCTV
monitoring, alarms, cages, restraints, nonlethal and lethal
weapons, riot-control gear and physical segregation of units and
prisoners may all also be present within a prison to monitor and
control the movement and activity of prisoners within the
facility.
Modern prison designs, particularly those of
high-security prisons, have sought to increasingly restrict and
control the movement of prisoners throughout the facility while
minimizing the corrections staffing needed to monitor and control
the population. As compared to the traditional
landing-cellblock-hall designs, many newer prisons are designed in
a decentralized "podular" layout with individual self-contained
housing units, known as "pods" or "modules", arranged around
centralized outdoor yards in a "campus". The pods contain tiers of
cells laid out in an open pattern arranged around a central control
station from which a single corrections officer can monitor all of
the cells and the entire pod. Control of cell doors, communications
and CCTV monitoring is conducted from the control station as well.
Movement out of the pod to the exercise yard or work assignments
can be restricted to individual pods at designated times, or else
prisoners may be kept almost always within their pod or even their
individual cells depending upon the level of security. Goods and
services, such as meals, laundry, commissary,
educational materials, religious services and medical care can
increasingly be brought to individual pods or cells as well.
Conversely, despite these design innovations,
overcrowding at many prisons, particularly in the U.S., has
resulted in a contrary trend, as many prisons are forced to house
large numbers of prisoners, often hundreds at a time, in gymnasiums
or other large buildings that have been converted into massive open
dormitories.
Lower-security prisons are often designed with
less restrictive features, confining prisoners at night in smaller
locked dormitories or even cottage or cabin-like housing while
permitting them freer movement around the grounds to work or
activities during the day.
See Panopticon for a
historical prison design that has influenced modern designs.
Types
Juvenile
Prisons for juveniles (people under 18) are known as young offenders institutes and hold minors who have been convicted, many countries have their own age of criminal responsibility in which children are deemed legally responsible for their actions for a crime. seealso Juvenile delinquencyMilitary
Prisons form part of military systems, and are used variously to house prisoners of war, unlawful combatants, those whose freedom is deemed a national security risk by military or civilian authorities, and members of the military found guilty of a serious crime.Political
Certain countries maintain or have in the past had a system of political prisons; arguably the gulags associated with Stalinism are best known. The definition of what is and is not a political crime and a political prison is, of course, highly controversial.Psychiatric
Some psychiatric facilities have characteristics of prisons, especially when confining patients who have committed a crime and are considered dangerous. In addition, many prisons have psychiatric units dedicated to housing offenders diagnosed with a wide variety of mental disorders.Rehabilitation
Meta-analysis of previous studies shows that
prison sentences do not reduce future offenses, when compared to
non-residential sanctions. This meta-analysis of one hundred
separate studies found that post-release offenses were around 7%
higher after imprisonment compared with non-residential sanctions,
at statistically significant levels. Another meta-analysis of 101
separate tests of the impact of prison on crime found a 3% increase
in offending after imprisonment. Longer periods of time in prison
make outcomes worse, not better; offending increases by around 3%
as prison sentences increase in length.
Effective rehabilitation programs reduce the
likelihood of re-offense and recidivism. Effective
programs are characterised by three things: first, they provide
more hours for people with known offense risk factors (the Risk
Principle); secondly, they address problems and needs that have a
proven causal link to offending (the Needs Principle); and thirdly,
they use cognitive-behavioural approaches (the Responsivity
Principle). Providing rehabilitation to people at lower risk of
reoffending results in a 3% reduction in reoffending, while
providing rehabilitation to people with a high risk of reoffending
is three times as effective, resulting in a 10% reduction in
subsequent offending. Risk factors for reoffending are: age at
first offense, number of prior offenses, level of family and
personal problems in childhood and other historical factors, along
with level of current needs related to offending. Those individuals
who had many personal and family problems in childhood
(particularly 19 or more), started offending before puberty, and
have committed multiple priors are more likely to reoffend in
future, according to longitudinal studies internationally.
In support of the Needs Principle: Programs that
specifically target criminogenic needs (causal needs and problems),
see a 19% reduction in reoffending.
In support of the Responsivity Principle: There
is a 23% reduction in reoffending after participating in programs
that use cognitive-behavioural methods to bring about changes in
behaviour, thinking, and relationships.
When all three of these principles are
effectively applied, the impact on offending is a 26-32% reduction.
This is in comparison to a 3-7% increase in offending that is found
with imprisonment.
Residential approaches—whether in
prison or some other live-in option—tend to be less
effective than non-residential approaches. These researchers found
that effective programs delivered in the community were followed by
a 35% reduction in reoffending, whereas effective programs
delivered in residential settings (such as prisons and halfway
houses) were followed by a 17% reduction in reoffending. One very
likely reason for this is that for teens and adults, mixing with
antisocial peers increases the risk of offending. In prison or
residences inmates spend a great deal of time with other people
immersed in criminal pursuits and beliefs, whereas in
community-based programs there is more opportunity to mix with
people involved in constructive, law-abiding activities. Antisocial
peers in prisons and residences can form a very powerful pressure
group, subtly and not so subtly influencing the behavior of other
inmates.
Population statistics
As of 2006, it is estimated that at least 9.25
million people are currently imprisoned worldwide. It is believed
that this number is likely to be much higher, in view of general
under-reporting and a lack of data from various countries,
especially authoritarian
regimes.
In absolute terms, the United
States currently has the largest inmate population in the
world, with more than 2½ million or more than one in a hundred
adults in prison and jails. Although the United States represents
less than 5% of the world's population, over 25% of the people
incarcerated around the world are housed in the American prison
system. Pulitzer Prize winning author Joseph T. Hallinan wrote in
his book Going Up the River: Travels in a Prison Nation, "so common
is the prison experience that the federal government predicts one
in eleven men will be incarcerated in his lifetime, one in four if
he is black." In 2002, both Russia and
China also had prison populations in excess of 1 million. By
October 2006, the Russian prison population declined to 869,814
which translated into 611 prisoners per 100,000 population.
As a percentage of total population, the United
States also has the largest imprisoned population, with 739 people
per 100,000 serving time, awaiting trial or otherwise
detained.
In March 2007, the United
Kingdom had 80,000 inmates (up from 73,000 in 2003 and 44,000
in 1985) in its facilities, one of the highest rates among the
western members of the European Union
(EU) (a record formerly held by Portugal). The
highest imprisonment rates among the larger EU members include that
of Poland,
which in August 2007 had about 90,000 inmates, i.e. 234 prisoners
per 100,000 inhabitants, || 611 || 186 || 126 || 148 || 91 || 107
|| 95 ||22|| 104 || 85 || 105 || 82 || 77 || 62 || 40 |}
Prisons by country
Australia
Many prisons in Australia were built by convict labour in the 1800s. During the 1990s, various state governments in Australia engaged private sector correctional corporations to build and operate prisons whilst several older government run institutions were decommissioned. Operation of Federal detention centres was also privatised at a time when a large influx of illegal immigrants began to arrive in Australia.Canada
see Correctional Service CanadaFrance
France has 188 prisons in mainland and the oversea territories. Statistics showed around 50,000 places on July 1, 2005 for around 60,000 prisoners.Germany
see Prisons in GermanyGermany has 194
prisons (of which 19 are open institutions). Official statistics
showed 80,214 places on March 31
2007. On the
same day, there were 75,719 prisoners (of which 13,168 pre-trial;
60,619 serving sentences; 1,932 others, i.e. mainly civil
prisoners; 4,068 were female). This is less than the highest value
of 81,176 prisoners on March 31
2003.
India
There are 1305 prisons in India (Central Jail 93. District Jail-257. Sub-Jail 850, Open Jail-2. Special jail 28. Women jail I?.Borstal Institution-13 and Juvenile and Lunatics Camps-13) having the authorized capacity of 214241. Against this authorized accommodation the actual prison population is 257235 which is dominated by the large chunk of under trial prisoners 1 e.. 73% This proportion of under trial prisoners is rapidly is on increase leading to overcrowding in Jail 20% in 1998 against 9.33% in 1996. The percentage of women prisoners in total prison population Is increasing on rapid pace especially in Bihar. Madhya Pradesh. Gujrat. Orissa, Andhra Pradesh. Maharashtra and Mizoram, while in Delhi and Haryana it is slightly declining or static in comparison to the year 1996. The problem of overcrowding in jail Is not uniformly prevailing In all States IUTs. However is 3.18%. We have the sanctioned Strength of 49030 of prison staff at various rank's out of which the present staff strength is ?round 40000. The ratio between the prison staff and the prison population is approximately 1:7. It means only one prison officer is available for 7 prisoners. while in UK 2 prison officers are available only for 3 prisoners. (Statistical profile of Prisons in India prepared by Bureau of Police Research and Development. Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India, New Delhi as on 31.12.1998)Ireland
Most jails in the Republic of Ireland were built in the 19th century, including Kilmainham Gaol (no longer in use), Mountjoy Prison and Portlaoise Prison. A new €30m prison is planned at Thornton Hall to replace Mountjoy.Jamaica
see Prisons in JamaicaJapan
see Penal system of JapanNew Zealand
New Zealand currently maintains 19 prisons around the country. The Department of Corrections has an annual budget of NZD$748 million and assets worth over NZD$1.7 billion. Official statistics show (as of June 30 2007) that there are currently 7,605 prisoners within the New Zealand correctional system. (5,490 Sentenced Prisoners and 1,552 Remanded Prisoners) + 5,795 staff. Breakouts are only at 0.15 per 100 prisoners and there is a rate of only 15% positive drug results during random drug testing in NZ prisons.Poland
As of the end of August 2007, Poland officially declared 90,199 prisoners (13,374 pre-trial; 76,434 serving sentences; 391 others; 2,743 prisoners were female), giving an imprisonment rate per 100,000 inhabitants of about 234. The overpopulation rate (number of prisoners held compared to number of places for prisoners) was estimated by the official prison service as 119%.The growth rate of imprisonment in Poland during
2006-2007 was approximately 4% annually, based on the August 2007
estimate of 90,199 prisoners and the June 2005 estimate of 82,572
prisoners.
Turkey
Prisons in Turkey are classified as closed, semi-open and open prisons. Closed prisons are separated into different kinds according to its structure and the number of the prisoners held. Examples are A type, B type, E type and F type. F types are the ones in which high penalty prisoners are held. Most which are being built today are L types that are for low penalty prisoners.Correspondence
Research indicates that inmates who maintain contact with family and friends in the outside world are less likely to offend and usually have an easier reintegration period back into society. Many institutions encourage friends and families to send letters, especially when they are unable to visit regularly. However, guidelines exist as to what constitutes acceptable mail, and these policies are strictly enforced.Mail sent to inmates in violation of prison
policies can cost inmates "gain time" and even lead to punishment.
Most Department
of Corrections websites provide detailed information regarding
mail policies. These rules can even vary within a single prison
depending on which part of the prison an inmate is housed. For
example, death row and
maximum
security inmates are usually under stricter mail guidelines for
security reasons.
There have been several notable challenges to
prison corresponding services. The Missouri Department of
Corrections (DOC) stated that effective June 1, 2007, inmates would be
prohibited from using pen pal websites
citing concerns of fraud. Service providers such as WriteAPrisoner.com,
together with the ACLU, plan to
challenge the ban in Federal Court. Similar bans on an inmate's
rights or a website's right to post such information has been ruled
unconstitutional in other courts, citing First Amendment freedoms.
Since most DOCs already post inmate information on their websites,
critics claim this is a moot point. Inmates' ability to mail
letters to other inmates has been limited by the courts. Inmate
correspondence with members of society is typically encouraged
because of the positive impact it can have on inmates, albeit under
the guidelines of each institution and availability of letter
writers.
See also
- Anton Praetorius (early prison reformer)
- Community service
- Department of Corrections
- Dispute Resolution
- Jailhouse lawyer
- Kishka (prison cell)
- Penal labour
- Penology
- Prison abolition movement
- Prison education
- Prison escape
- Prison officer
- Prison reform
- Prison religion
- Prison sexuality (homosexuality and abuse in prisons)
- Prisoner's dilemma
- Prisoners' rights
- Punishment
- Rehabilitation
- Supermax Prison
- Specific prisons
- Types of imprisonments
- Types of prisons
- Prison-related crime
- Game
References
Further reading
- David Denborough, Beyond the Prison: Gathering Dreams of Freedom, Adelaide, South Australia: Dulwich Centre Publications 1996.
- Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish: the Birth of the Prison, New York: Random House 1975.
- James (Jim) Bruton, Big House: Life Inside a Supermax Security Prison, Voyageur Press (July, 2004), hardcover, 192 pages, ISBN 0-89658-039-3
- George Jackson, Soledad brother, ISBN 978-1556522307.
- Paula C. Johnson, Inner Lives: Voices of African American Women in Prison, New York University Press 2004.
- Marek M. Kaminski (2004) Games Prisoners Play. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-11721-7
- Ted Conover. Newjack: Guarding Sing Sing. Knopf, 2001. Trade paperback, 352 pages, ISBN 0-375-72662-4
- Mark L. Taylor. The Executed God: The Way of the Cross in Lockdown America. Augsburg Fortress Publishers, 2001. ISBN 0-8006-3283-4
- Heinz Sobota, Der Minus-Mann. Heyne Verlag 1980, ISBN 345301111
External links
- Prison Statistics - US Bureau of Justice Statistics
- Home Office, UK - Justice and prisons
- Wil S. Hylton. "Sick on the Inside: Correctional HMOs and the coming prison plague". Harper's Magazine, August 2003.
- World Prison Population List (fourth edition) UK Home Office, 2003. .
- "Blogs from prison", 2006. Summary of a cultural extension workshop in a juvenile detention facility.
- Peter Kropotkin, "In Russian and French Prisons". Online book. This is a criticism of the existence of prisons.
prison in Arabic: سجن
prison in Aymara: Mutüwi
prison in Bosnian: Zatvor
prison in Breton: Toull-bac'h
prison in Bulgarian: Затвор (институция)
prison in Catalan: Presó
prison in Czech: Věznice
prison in Welsh: Carchar
prison in Danish: Fængsel
prison in German: Gefängnis
prison in Estonian: Vangla
prison in Spanish: Prisión
prison in Esperanto: Malliberejo
prison in Persian: زندان
prison in French: Prison
prison in Korean: 교도소
prison in Indonesian: Penjara
prison in Icelandic: Fangelsi
prison in Italian: Prigione
prison in Hebrew: בית סוהר
prison in Lithuanian: Kalėjimas
prison in Hungarian: Börtönbüntetés
prison in Malay (macrolanguage): Penjara
prison in Dutch: Gevangenis
prison in Japanese: 刑務所
prison in Norwegian: Fengsel
prison in Polish: Zakład karny
prison in Portuguese: Prisão
prison in Quechua: Samk'ay wasi
prison in Russian: Тюрьма
prison in Sicilian: Carciareri
prison in Simple English: Prison
prison in Slovak: Väznica
prison in Slovenian: Zapor
prison in Finnish: Vankila
prison in Swedish: Anstalt
simple
sv:Häxte
prison in Vietnamese: Nhà tù
prison in Turkish: Cezaevi
prison in Ukrainian: Тюрма
prison in Walloon: Prijhon
prison in Yiddish: טורמע
prison in Chinese: 監獄
Title: Overview
study. An assistance to drug users in European prisons. Editor(s)
Stover H Publisher: Lisbon: EMCDDA Publication Year: 2001
Pagination: 305p ISBN: 1 902114 03 5 Call No. MO4, HK, VH4 Document
Type Book Notes includes bibliographical references. A5, ringbound
Full Text http://www.hipp-europe.org/downloads/england-prisonsanddrugs
(abridged) Keywords [ prevalence ] [ communicable disease by
infectious agent ] [ AOD prevention ] [ harm reduction ] [
prison-based health service ] [ drug-free zoning ] [ European Union
] [ prison ]Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
POW camp, bastille, big house, black
hole, borstal, borstal
institution, bridewell, brig, calaboose, can, cell, chokey, clink, concentration camp,
condemned cell, confine,
confinement,
constrain, cooler, death cell, death house,
death row, detention,
detention camp, dungeon,
federal prison, forced-labor camp, gaol, glasshouse, guardhouse, hoosegow, house of correction,
house of detention, immure, incarcerate, industrial
school, intern,
internment camp, jail,
jailhouse, jug, keep, labor camp, lockup, maximum-security prison,
minimum-security prison, oubliette, pen, penal colony, penal
institution, penal settlement, penitentiary, pokey, poky, prison camp, prisonhouse, quod, reform school, reformatory, slammer, sponging house, state
prison, stir, stockade, the hole, tollbooth, training
school