Sweden's Remarkable Prison System Has Done What the
U.S. Won't Even Consider -
Zeeshan
Aleem
The darkest manifestation of
American exceptionalism may be its prison system.
The United States has the
highest incarceration rate in the world: It has only 5% of the
world's population, but one-quarter
of its prisoners. U.S. prisons are dangerously
overcrowded, house
10 times as many
mentally ill individuals as state hospitals, keep people locked up
for
unfathomably long
periods of time, are plagued by
inmate abuse and hold a
far greater percentage
of the country's black population than South Africa did under
apartheid. Nearly
two-thirds of the inmates released every year
return to prison; crippling discrimination in employment and
housing encumbers the ones who manage to function. This is all to
say that if you are convicted of an imprisonable crime in the U.S.,
you generally get shown little mercy.
After decades of bipartisan consensus on criminal justice policy,
there are
some signs that the federal government thinks that the highly
punitive system of mass incarceration seems to have gotten out of
hand, and some states are
making gestures toward making prisons less crowded. But in order
to understand how best to fix these problems, one must look beyond
policy tweaks and consider the underlying moral philosophy that
explains why a society sends people to prison in the manner that
they do. In the U.S., that philosophy is one of inflicting
punishment and pain.
In Nordic countries like Sweden, which have far lower
incarceration and crime rates, prison is about rehabilitation. And
it works far more effectively.
Getting people in better shape: "Our
role is not to punish. The punishment is the prison sentence: They
have been deprived of their freedom. The punishment is that they are
with us," Nils Öberg, director-general of Sweden's prison and
probation service, told the
Guardianin 2014.
Sweden's prison system boasts impressive numbers. As the
Guardian notes, in the past decade, the number of Swedish
prisoners has dropped from 5,722 to 4,500 out of a population of 9.5
million. The country has closed a number of prisons, and the
recidivism rate is around 40%, which is far less than in the U.S.
and most European countries.
Öberg believes that the way Sweden treats its prisoners is partly
responsible for keeping incarceration and recidivism rates so low.
"It has to do with whether you decide to use prison as your first
option or as a last resort, and what you want your probation system
to achieve," he told the Guardian. "Some people have to be
incarcerated, but it has to be a goal to get them back out into
society in better shape than they were when they came in."
The Nordic model: Nordic
countries in general have an
illustrative track record when it comes to minimizing the number
of people who enter and re-enter their prisons. There are many
factors that contribute to the effectiveness of their prison systems
compared to many other countries in the West. They are relatively
inclusive societies with widely shared prosperity and a low degree
of corrosive racial tension (mainly due to racial homogeneity). But
the low rates of return to prisons in particular hints at
an alternative model for how to treat prisoners.
In an insightful article intheAtlantic,
Doran Larson explains how his research on prisons revealed that
Nordic countries' rehabilitative ethos produces tangible results for
those countries. Even in the high-security prisons he visited in
Sweden, Denmark, Norway and Finland, he observed some remarkable
things:
Common areas included table tennis, pool tables, steel
darts and aquariums. Prisoner art ornamented walls painted
in mild greens and browns and blues. But the most profound
difference is that correctional officers fill both
rehabilitative and security roles. Each prisoner has a
"contact officer" who monitors and helps advance progress
toward return to the world outside — a practice introduced
to help officers avoid the damage experienced by performing
purely punitive functions.
While high-security prisons in the U.S. often involve caging and
dehumanizing a prisoner, prisons in Nordic countries are designed to
treat them as people with psychosocial needs that are to be
carefully attended to. Prison workers fulfill a dual role of
enforcer and social worker, balancing behavioral regulation with
preparation for re-entry into society.
A
"Open" prisons: Even more
remarkable than this is the use of "open prisons" in the region.
Prisoners at open prisons stay in housing that often resembles
college dorms, have access to accessories such as televisions and
sound systems and are able to commute to a job and visit families
while electronically monitored. Prisoners and staff eat together in
the community spaces built throughout the prison. None are expected
to wear uniforms.
Larson contends that open
prison punishments can be more effective than closed prison
punishments in that they don't distract the prisoner from the
misdeeds that brought them there, as harsh American prisons often
do:
Imagine living on ... knowing every minute of every day,
that this is not your home, these people are not your
family, your friends, your children, and you are always one
misstep from a cell in a closed prison. You have strict
curfews. In town you carry an electronic anklet. Yet nothing
here feels unfair or unreasonable. You have, after all,
committed a crime serious enough to make a range of other
remedies untenable. Nothing you can see or touch or smell or
taste, and no interaction with staff gives you anything to
blame or resent about the system that brought you here.
Larson's depiction of open prisons as carving out space for purer
reflection and remorse is fascinating — and undoubtedly alarming to
supporters of the American model of incarceration.
Defenders of the highly punitive American prison would argue that
the Nordic attitude toward prisons in general is naive in its
assumption that prisoners can be treated as normal humans who can
improve. Yet Nordic countries remain quite safe after allowing
people who have committed the most severe crimes to spend time in
them, generally for far shorter sentences than in the U.S.
It seems that there's a self-fulfilling dimension to the way a
society chooses to imprison those that it deems criminal: If you
tell someone they cannot get better, they won't; if you tell someone
they can, they might just have a decent shot.
The darkest
manifestation of American exceptionalism may be its prison system.
The United
States has the highest incarceration rate in the world: It has only 5% of the
world's population, but one-quarter
of its prisoners. U.S. prisons are dangerously
overcrowded, house
10 times as many mentally ill individuals as
state hospitals, keep people locked up for
unfathomably long periods of time, are
plagued by
inmate abuse and hold a
far greater percentage of the country's
black population than South Africa did under apartheid. Nearly
two-thirds of the inmates released every
year
return to prison; crippling discrimination
in employment and housing encumbers the ones who manage to function. This is all
to say that if you are convicted of an imprisonable crime in the U.S., you
generally get shown little mercy.
After decades of
bipartisan consensus on criminal justice policy, there are
some signs that the federal government
thinks that the highly punitive system of mass incarceration seems to have
gotten out of hand, and some states are
making gestures toward making prisons less
crowded. But in order to understand how best to fix these problems, one must
look beyond policy tweaks and consider the underlying moral philosophy that
explains why a society sends people to prison in the manner that they do. In the
U.S., that philosophy is one of inflicting punishment and pain.
In Nordic
countries like Sweden, which have far lower incarceration and crime rates,
prison is about Rehabilitation. And it
works far more effectively.
Getting people
in better shape: "Our
role is not to punish. The punishment is the prison sentence: They have been
deprived of their freedom. The punishment is that they are with us," Nils Öberg,
director-general of Sweden's prison and probation service, told theGuardianin 2014.
Sweden's prison system boasts impressive numbers. As the Guardian notes,
in the past decade, the number of Swedish prisoners has dropped from 5,722 to
4,500 out of a population of 9.5 million. The country has closed a number of
prisons, and the recidivism rate is around 40%, which is far less than in the
U.S. and most European countries.
Öberg believes
that the way Sweden treats its prisoners is partly responsible for keeping
incarceration and recidivism rates so low.
"It has to do
with whether you decide to use prison as your first option or as a last
resort, and what you want your probation system to achieve,"
he told the Guardian.
"Some people have to be incarcerated, but it has to be a goal to get them
back out into society in better shape than they were when they came in."
The Nordic
model: Nordic countries
in general have an
illustrative track record when it comes to
minimizing the number of people who enter and re-enter their prisons. There are
many factors that contribute to the effectiveness of their prison systems
compared to many other countries in the West. They are relatively inclusive
societies with widely shared prosperity and a low degree of corrosive racial
tension (mainly due to racial homogeneity). But the low rates of return to
prisons in particular hints at an alternative model for how to treat prisoners.
In an insightful article intheAtlantic,
Doran Larson explains how his research on prisons revealed that Nordic
countries' rehabilitative ethos produces tangible results for those countries.
Even in the high-security prisons he visited in Sweden, Denmark, Norway and
Finland, he observed some remarkable things:
Common areas
included table tennis, pool tables, steel darts and aquariums. Prisoner art
ornamented walls painted in mild greens and browns and blues. But the most
profound difference is that correctional officers fill both rehabilitative and
security roles. Each prisoner has a "contact officer" who monitors and helps
advance progress toward return to the world outside — a practice introduced to
help officers avoid the damage experienced by performing purely punitive
functions.
While high-security prisons in the U.S. often involve caging and dehumanizing a
prisoner, prisons in Nordic countries are designed to treat them as people with
psychosocial needs that are to be carefully attended to. Prison workers fulfill
a dual role of enforcer and social worker, balancing behavioral regulation with
preparation for re-entry into society.
"Open" prisons:
Even more remarkable than this is the use of "open prisons" in the region.
Prisoners at open prisons stay in housing that often resembles college dorms,
have access to accessories such as televisions and sound systems and are able to
commute to a job and visit families while electronically monitored. Prisoners
and staff eat together in the community spaces built throughout the prison. None
are expected to wear uniforms.
Larson contends
that open prison punishments can be more effective than closed prison
punishments in that they don't distract the prisoner from the misdeeds that
brought them there, as harsh American prisons often do:
Imagine living
on ... knowing every minute of every day, that this is not your home,
these people are not your family, your friends, your children, and you are
always one misstep from a cell in a closed prison. You have strict curfews. In
town you carry an electronic anklet. Yet nothing here feels unfair or
unreasonable. You have, after all, committed a crime serious enough to make a
range of other remedies untenable. Nothing you can see or touch or smell or
taste, and no interaction with staff gives you anything to blame or resent about
the system that brought you here.
Larson's
depiction of open prisons as carving out space for purer reflection and remorse
is fascinating — and undoubtedly alarming to supporters of the American model of
incarceration.
Defenders of the
highly punitive American prison would argue that the Nordic attitude toward
prisons in general is naive in its assumption that prisoners can be treated as
normal humans who can improve. Yet Nordic countries remain quite safe after
allowing people who have committed the most severe crimes to spend time in them,
generally for far shorter sentences than in the U.S.
It seems that there's a self-fulfilling dimension to the way a society chooses
to imprison those that it deems criminal: If you tell someone they cannot get
better, they won't; if you tell someone they can, they might just have a decent
shot.