NCJ Number
108259
Date Published
1987
Length
16 pages
Annotation
This paper reviews recommendations on long-term imprisonment made by the British Control Review Committee and sets forth major principles of an alternative model for long-term imprisonment.
Abstract
It is suggested that the top-down management approach recommended by the Committee is unrealistic, failing to recognize the importance of the relationships with those to be managed, and that management is a cooperative venture requiring a multidimensional flow of communication. It is suggested that strategies for managing the long-term inmate population must be based on the staff-inmate relationship and a commitment to minimizing rather than compounding the effects of the long-term sentence. This requires the availability of channels of communication between staff and inmates, trust and confidence, mechanisms for ensuring inmates' rights, and a career planning approach to inmate programs and services. A new generation approach to prison management requires a bottom-up pattern of relationships based on multilevel decisionmaking and multidirectional communication, coupled with both internal and external accountability. 1 note and 17 references.