Should
prison guards be allowed to use informal controls?
The question is, should prison guards be allowed to utilize
informal controls as a means of disciplining or controlling inmates within the
prison system? When I mention the words ‘prison system’ here I am talking about
both jails and prisons where correction officers work and maintain control of
the inmates. According to one article from the American Journal of Criminal
Justice, correctional
officers maintain control of the institutional environment by utilizing both
formal and informal methods; and according to that same article, studies have
indicated that both of these methods are essential for the facilities to
operate efficiently. However,
even though the utilization of these informal controls may be helpful to
correctional officers for them to be more efficient it doing their jobs, I do not
believe that correctional officers should be allowed to exercise informal
controls within the prison system, and Here is why.
First, we have to take
into consideration that even though a person commits a crime and goes to jail
or prison that he or she is still a human being and should be treated as such.
Secondly, when guards are allowed to use informal controls it also means that
they would have the power to operate outside of the rules and regulations of
the prison system; therefore, the correctional officers would be able to do
almost anything to punish an inmate if he/she violates any of the rules or
regulations, especially if that guard/correctional dislikes a particular inmate.
For example, as Banks (2013, p 158) pointed out, “At Walpole prison, a guard
might resort locking inmates in their cells instead of issuing a disciplinary report
for an infraction such as an inmate refusing to get back into line.” In
addition to this, other commentator also pointed out that the guards in that
same prison use other informal methods of control, such as guards flushing
toilets back into particular cells, shutting off the electricity, withholding
toilet paper from inmates, and even keeping back food (Kauffman 1988: 65). Now, some people might say that these inmates
deserve to be treated this way because inmates can be dangerous; and, these
people might have a valid point because, as Banks (2013, p. 153) also points,
guards frequently experience personal challenges from inmates. However, this
kind of behavior by the correctional officers, to me, is not only unethical,
but is also very unprofessional.
As Banks (2013) also noted, according to a
former commissioner of corrections, “if offenders are to become responsible
citizens, it is essential that they be treated in a civil manner by
correctional authorities, whose task is to model good citizenship by protecting
certain fundamental rights.” This means that prisoners still have basic rights
even though they may be incarcerated. However, as we have seen, when these
guards/correctional officers are allowed utilize different types informal
controls they deprive inmates of their basic rights and an opportunity for self
improvement. This is not what being a model of good citizenship is about. I
also believe that when we allow guards to exercise informal controls that we
also give them permission to abuse their power, and we have seen this type of abuse
in the examples provided. This is why I believe that guard should not be
allowed to utilize informal controls in the prison system.
Reference
Banks, C. (2013). Criminal
justice ethics (3rd ed.). Thousand Oaks: SAGE