CHAPTER 1
CHANGE AND CONTINUITY IN THE CANADIAN PRISON -- LESSONS FROM SCHOLARSHIP
Since its adoption in Europe and North America in the late eighteenth
century as the principal form of punishment for serious crime, the prison
has left indelible marks on our culture. These are recorded in great works
of literature by writers such as Victor Hugo and Alexander Solzhenitsyn;
they can be seen in the architecture of high-walled fortress penitentiaries
and high-tech correctional institutions. Less visibly, they are etched
on the lives of those who have endured the pain of imprisonment. Although
these experiences sometimes see the light of day in accounts by former
prisoners, more often than not they remain hidden in the graffiti of prison
cells or explode into public consciousness in the form of violent riots.
Less evident and less accessible than great literature or imposing architecture,
and less immediate than violent rebellion, is a library of scholarly work
on the prison: its origins and historical evolution, its professed and
covert purposes, its character as a social institution, its distinctive
culture of the keeper and the kept, its successes and failures as a state
institution, and its place in a system of social control that extends
far beyond prison gates.
In this chapter I will reach into this body of work to place my study
-- which is largely confined to two institutions in Western Canada in
the late twentieth century -- in a larger historical, geographical, and
conceptual space. My primary purpose in doing so will be to examine the
myriad of questions raised by the prison as an institution and by the
practice of imprisonment, specifically with reference to the role of the
law, lawyers, and the courts. Studies by lawyers that are grounded in
the reality of imprisonment are relatively absent from the literature.
As I ask my students at the beginning of their first year of law school,
is it not strange that lawyers and judges, as gatekeepers of the only
process that can result in a sentence of imprisonment, know or care so
little about what happens inside prisons? Lawyers and judges who participate
in criminal trials well understand the rules of criminal procedure and
the principles of substantive criminal law. It is in the acquittals or
convictions that flow from the application of process to principle that
we see the model of justice according to law. But what happens when justice
results in a prison sentence, once all appeals have been exhausted, is
rarely subject to scrutiny by the legal profession. The point at which
the criminal justice system will have its greatest impact on the individual
is the point at which for the legal profession the process has run its
course. It is simply assumed that the prison sentence, whether by deterring,
apportioning just deserts, rehabilitating, or simply incapacitating the
prisoner for the duration of the sentence, serves the ends of justice.
A significant part of this book will be directed to challenging the legal
profession to take seriously its responsibility to those men and women
who are sentenced to imprisonment, as well as to challenging the assumption
that the prison sentence, as administered by prison administrators and
staff, does indeed serve the ends of justice.
The broadened context of my inquiry is not solely for the benefit of
the legal profession. A good deal of my time inside prisons has been spent
talking with and observing the way prison administrators and staff make
decisions affecting prisoners. Although they work in institutions with
a deep intellectual and social history, most administrators and staff
are unfamiliar with that history, or feel disconnected from it in their
daily work. In the eyes of the law, correctional staff are important participants
in serving the ends of justice, yet they receive little acknowledgement,
and even less validation, of their difficult and at times dangerous responsibilities.
While television is not a reliable guide to the realities of crime or
the criminal justice system, the saturation of network prime time with
programs about police officers and lawyers, and the exclusion of programs
about prison life (the American series Oz
being the only exception), speaks volumes about how the work of correctional
staff is disconnected from the practice of justice. My interviews with
correctional staff were, for many, the first time in their professional
lives that someone from outside the correctional establishment had sought
their views. In this respect, staff, like prisoners, are disenfranchised
as participants in the justice system. By bringing together the library
of prison scholarship with the actual experiences of correctional staff,
I hope to expose some of the challenges and contradictions that these
people encounter in their work. Page 1 of 9
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