Prisongate: The Shocking State Of Britain's Prisons & The Need For Visionary Change
By (Author) Sir David Ramsbotham
Simon & Schuster
Simon & Schuster
7th March 2005
United States
General
Non Fiction
365.941
Paperback
288
Width 130mm, Height 198mm
Drugs and violence are rife in our filthy, overcrowded prisons. Women and underage prisoners are treated badly by staff and other prisoners alike. 70 percent of prisoners suffer from a mental disorder, yet during their time in prison they are denied the services of the NHS, 65 percent of all adult prisoners have a reading age of less than eight, over 50 percent of all women prisoners have suffered sexual or physical abuse or both, most often from their families. The Victorian approach to the prison service was punitative rather than rehabilitating. Now that we understand that most prisoners are themselves victims of some sort that out-dated attitude must change. The role of the Criminal Justice System in our society is to protect the public by preventing crime. The prisons' role in this system is to prevent the next crime, or the next victim, by helping prisoners to lead useful and law-abiding lives both in their time in prison and afterwards. Statistics show they are failing. The only government White Paper on the subject of imprisonment, published in the wake of serious riots in Manchester in 1991, has not been actioned.
Sir David Ramsbotham, GCB CBE is an establishment figure and former Army general who was Her Majesty's Chief Inspector of Prisons for five and a half years. Seeking prison reform, he was a thorn in the side of Jack Straw's government just when they thought he was going to be submissive.