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Conditions of Confinement Within Security Prisons - Scandinavia and California

NCJ Number
99753
Journal
Crime and Delinquency Volume: 31 Issue: 4 Dated: (October 1985) Pages: 573-600
Author(s)
J R Snortum; K Bodal
Date Published
1985
Length
28 pages
Annotation
Within the past three decades, the Scandinavian countries have acquired an international reputation for the development of innovative and humane prisons.
Abstract
Most of the favorable attention from journalists and social scientists has centered upon the so-called 'model prisons,' which are typically smaller, newer, and 'open.' However, the majority of Scandinavian prisoners are still incarcerated in the larger, older, locked prisons that are rather traditional in design and function. One might question whether these traditional prisons are, in fact, superior to American state prisons and whether they would meet emerging U.S. standards for conditions of confinement. This investigation surveyed the nature of prison programs, staffing ratios, living conditions, and visiting conditions within 16 'closed' or secure prisons, including 4 each from Norway, Sweden, Finland, and California. On most measures, the conditions of confinement were most severe in California prisons, much less severe in Finnish prisons, and least severe in Norwegian and Swedish prisons. (Author abstract)