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KMWV Inc. Presents:

KMWV Inc. Presents:. KMWV Inc. is a partnership including Meaghan Uyede , Vivian Seh , Kelvin Lau, and Wins Lai. Danish Prisons. Background Information Staff within Prison: 2600 Expenditure: 13.7 million Danish crowns Revenue: 119 million (9% of revenue) from sale of inmate products

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KMWV Inc. Presents:

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  1. KMWV Inc. Presents: KMWV Inc. is a partnership including Meaghan Uyede, Vivian Seh, Kelvin Lau, and Wins Lai

  2. Danish Prisons • Background Information Staff within Prison: 2600 Expenditure: 13.7 million Danish crowns Revenue: 119 million (9% of revenue) from sale of inmate products Recidivism Rate: 27% • Highlights Fewer prisoners in jail Shorter sentences Fewer re-offenders Women guards More family visits More education Anger management courses • Principals Normalization* Openness Exercise to Responsibility Security Least Possible Intervention Optimum Use of Resources • Prisoner Responsibilities Required 37 hours per week of “purposeful activity” Choice of work or education Does own shopping Leaves granted usually when 1/3 of sentence served

  3. Sweden’s Prisons • Their mission is to prevent criminals from committing crimes while serving sentences • reduce from relapsing crime/ reform them • length of the prisoners’ sentence help prevent prisoners from relapsing • Should be done more individually • Substance abuser programs for motivation • possible to serve the last part of long sentencing at home • experiences had proven positive, monitoring using electronic monitoring

  4. Swiss Prison:Parklea Correctional Centre • Background Information Staff within Prison: 367 Prisoner Capacity Max. Security: 743 Drug Treatment: 70 Work Release Centre: 80 Recidivism Rate: 27% • Highlights Prisoner Employment • Engineering [General medium fabrication & Fire Brigade equipment] • Printing [General Printing] • Furniture [Furniture manufacturing and assembly] • P.S.B.U. [Pallet manufacture & specialist Tier pad processing] • (minimum security employment) • Laundry [Complex linen requirements] • Domestic [ General grounds & Complex Maintenance, Hygiene and cleaning services & catering] • Education Available Courses: - Literacy - Numeracy - Computers - Aboriginal Studies - Life Skills - Health and Fitness  • Offender Services and Programs • Welfare, psychologist, and other trained alcohol and drug workers • Providing programs to assist offenders in adjusting to their incarceration. Maintaining their links to the community and their families. • Compulsory Drug Treatment Centre provides multidisciplinary treatment, rehabilitation and reintegration to male offenders, who have repeatedly offended in order to support drug dependence • addresses physical, social and psychological needs of offenders, as well a drug related offending behaviour.

  5. AfghanistanKabul Prison One of the World’s Worst Prisons

  6. Pul-e-Charkhi prison • The Prison began its construction in 1970’s • Its completion was followed by the communist invasion of 1979 • The prison is overcrowded and the living standards are criticized by several human rights groups • The Prison currently houses 1300 inmates • 350 inmates are Taliban and Al- Qaeda members • There are about 70 female inmates • Some female inmates also have children living with them in their cell

  7. Conditions in Kabul Prison Corruption of the prison staff • Food, medicine, and clothing distributed by the Red Cross are collected and divided amongst prison staff • Toilets are looted by Taliban, inmates uses buckets as toilets • Food conditions are terrible • Inmates are forced to buy food from prison store, which are inflated several times to profit the Warden Torture and Sodomy • Taliban prison guards torture inmates as entertainment • Inmates are tortured until the loss of consciousness • Young men are sometimes sodomized by guards • Guards justifies their action by asking religious questions and making excuses • Prisoners are usually too scared or ashamed to speak out

  8. Riots in Pul-e-Charki December 2004 • Prison guards are attacked by inmates with razor blades • A shootout leaves 1 Iraqi, 3 Pakistani prisoners and 4 Afghani police dead January 2006 • Seven prisoners escapes, mingling and disguised as visitors • Prison policy is changed forcing prisoners to wear bright orange uniforms to prevent repeat of this incident February 2006 • Orange uniforms sparked the February riot • The 2,000 prisoners used knives and make-shift clubs to force guards out of the wings, igniting furniture and smashing windows • 300 Taliban and al-Qaeda militants are involved • 800 heavily armed Afghani soldiers NATO peacekeepers, tanks and armored carriers surrounded the prison • The riot lasted a few days, resulting in 6 deaths, and 22 critical injuries

  9. Ernest C. Ashton Centre for Detention and Rehabilitation Prisoner Capacity: 500 Max. Security Prisoners: 75 Med. Security Prisoners: 350 Min. Security Prisoners: 75 Total Staff: 200 Guards: 100 Buildings on Property: main cell block, recreation and classroom facility, administration facility, drug and alcohol rehabilitation facility, inspection building and parole hearings rooms [entrance], visitors centre, library Features: • Facility capable of containing minimum and maximum security prisoners • Multiple buildings and extensive grounds create a more real-world feel to reduce institutionalization • Earned levels of independence reduce prisoner dependence on authority figures

  10. Four Goals of Sentencing • Denunciation • Deterrence • Segregation • Rehabilitation

  11. Mission Statement The ECADCR strives to: • Make criminals aware of their crime, and the effects of their negative actions on society • Keep the public safe from harm by separating those who are considered acknowledged threats to public safety • Administer the Justice of the Courts when called upon to do so by providing a sufficient place of imprisonment where assigned sentences may be served • Rehabilitate prisoners so that they may be effective members of society, without handing them opportunities not available to the general public

  12. Philosophy Every prisoner who steps through the doors of the ECADCR is also a person. While ensuring justice is administered, and the prisoners serve sufficient terms, each prisoner is to be treated as an individual. By focusing on the unique mentalities of all inmates, the ECADCR seeks to rehabilitate the prisoners so that they may become productive members of society upon the completion of their sentences.

  13. Model Timetable 7:00-8:00            ~Breakfast 8:05-12:00           ~Class/Work 12:05-1:00         ~Lunch 1:05-5:30             ~Class/Work 5:35-7:00    ~Program Attendance 7:05-8:00             ~Dinner 8:05-9:30 ~Program Attendance 9:35-10:00          ~Leisure Time 10:15                   ~Lights-Out [Counts/Attendance will be conducted every three hours throughout the day by supervising figures]

  14. Programs • Interaction Program The Interaction Program is required by all offenders for the duration of their sentence. It involves a discussion session between offenders and psychology specialists. The program’s goal is for offenders to interact and pick out wrong concepts with professional assistance. [This will involve two to three sessions a week with a psychologist, working individually with each prisoner. There is not a set amount of time for this program, as the psychologists will work at the pace of each individual prisoner] • Property Importance Program The Property Importance Program is meant for offenders of property crimes such as theft and fraud. The program describes the effects of their actions, and assist offenders in preventing recidivism.

  15. Programs Cont’d • Purposeful Activity Program The Purposeful Activity Program is required by all offenders for the duration of their sentence. While imprisoned, offenders are required to perform a minimum of 8 hours, to a maximum of 40 hours of “purposeful activity,” the length of which is determined by the length of the sentence. There is a choice of education, work, or a combination. Any offenders that are involved with the Society Preparation Program are given a “salary” for both choices during the participation of the Society Preparation Program. • Society Preparation Program The Society Preparation Program is meant for any offenders whose sentence is more than three years. Towards the last year of their sentence, they are required to purchase and prepare their own food through the prison (with a supplied kitchen) with their own “salary”. They also become responsible for their own laundry, and other such menial tasks. The purpose of this program is to prevent institutionalization during the imprisonment.

  16. Programs Cont’d • Anger Management Program The Anger Management Program is meant for offenders that have committed offence(s) due to impulse. This program brings in specialists to assist offenders in controlling their anger and impulsive rages, resulting in the chance of lowering the rate of recidivism. • Respect for Genders Program The Respect for Genders Program is meant for sexual offenders that have committed acts of sexual assault(s) and family violence. The program explains to the offender the need for respect towards the other gender, assists the offenders in recognizing their trigger of re-offending, and provides strategies for preventing recidivism.

  17. Program Evaluation • The criteria of each individual program will be based on the set curriculum. • A course will be determined complete through a two-stage process. • The completion of the base curriculum will be assessed by the employee of the facility in charge of that class or program. • This employee will confer with the psychologist of the prisoner in question to determine if the psychological effects of the program were effective and if the program has been completed effectively.

  18. Additional Activities • Education: Prisoners may obtain a high school diploma free of charge. A post-secondary degree may be obtained for a small fee, paid from the “salary” earned by the prisoner through “employment”. • Employment: Prisoners may choose to be employed in the facility doing tasks similar to those listed under “Prisoner Employment” at Parklea. Prisoners will earn a “salary” if they seek a post-secondary education, or if they are part of the Society Preparation Program.

  19. KMWV Inc. Presents: KMWV Inc. is a partnership including Meaghan Uyede, Vivian Seh, Kelvin Lau, and Wins Lai

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