Let’s Get Briefed

“Considering our nation’s merciless criminal justice policies, it comes as no surprise that the United States has the largest prison population and highest incarceration rate in the world.”  (9)

The US Penal Institution is flawed in many ways, especially when compared to the rest of the world. Human injustices of all kinds can be found in almost every prison across America. I’m going to focus on one issue: the gross misuse of solitary confinement as punishment.

“The USA stands virtually alone in the world when it comes to incarcerating thousands of prisoners in long term or indefinite solitary confinement. Under the US system, inmates are held in small cells in harsh physical conditions and with minimal human interaction for years, sometimes decades. The mental health of many prisoners suffers greatly as a result and for some, the pressure leads them to take their own lives.” (1) Using isolation is a common practice within 40 states and 80,000 people are held in isolation at any given time. These cells usually measure to less than 80 square feet (smaller than a typical horse stable) and only contain a concrete bed, a desk, and a sink/toilet (note that I didn’t say a window). Prisoners are confined to their cells for typically more than 22 hours a day without access to work or rehabilitation programs. An hour of  ‘exercise’ time can be expected during your day, but it may be spent within a small cage with no view of the outside. 

“For most of the 20th century, a typical stay in solitary amounted to just a few days, or several weeks in more extreme cases. Today, it’s not unusual for inmates to spend years at a time in solitary. Supporters say the practice helps keep prisons safe, but according to the medical literature, solitary confinement can also take a heavy mental toll.” (10)

Conditions in isolation units, combined with the lack of rehabilitation programmes, can exacerbate existing mental health conditions and create new ones, such as anxiety, depression and paranoia. Many prisoners also suffer from extreme weight loss and sight problems caused by the conditions of detention.” (1) 

In some of the most extreme cases, like that of Albert Woodfox (of the Angola 3), one can wrongfully spend 44 years in solitary confinement. (4) The story of solitary confinement gets even worse when one looks at what happens once the prisoners are released. Amnesty says that “many prisoners are released straight from isolation to the community with no transition programme. In Arizona, for example, just before being released, they are simply provided with an ID and $50.” (1) An article from PBS Frontline talks on the ability of prisoners to adjust back into a larger society after being confined to isolation for extended periods, psychologist Craig Haney found that prisoners “lose the ability to initiate or to control their own behavior, or to organize their own lives.” He also found that often times prisoners in solitary “begin to lose the ability to initiate behavior of any kind — to organize their own lives around activity and purpose.” What results is chronic apathy, lethargy, depression and despair. “In extreme cases, prisoners may literally stop behaving.” (10)

In 2011 Juan Mendez, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, called on all countries to ban the solitary confinement of prisoners except in very exceptional circumstances and for as short a time as possible, with an absolute prohibition in the case of juveniles and people with mental disabilities.” (2) 

With all of this, one can conclude that America has outright ignored human rights under the thin vale of penal institutions.

 

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