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Wyświetlanie 1-3 z 3
Tytuł:
Prizonizacja a skazani na karę dożywotniego pozbawienia wolności
Prisonisation and Individuals Sentenced to Life in Prison
Autorzy:
Klimczak, Joanna
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/698684.pdf
Data publikacji:
2017
Wydawca:
Polska Akademia Nauk. Instytut Nauk Prawnych PAN
Tematy:
prizonizacja
skazani
kara dożywotniego pozbawienia wolności
podkultura więzienna
służba więzienna
kryminologia
Opis:
The article is based on my master’s thesis and addresses the issue of the prisonisation of inmates serving life sentences. Ever since Donald Clemmer introduced the idea of prisonisation, different interpretations of this phenomenon have been proposed. In particular, prisonisation has been described as a negative process, forcing a convict to become a ‘good prisoner’, incapable of fending for him or herself outside the penitentiary walls. According to Clemmer, long-term sentences contribute to a greater degree of prisonisation. Hence life prisoners are doomed to it. Is this a bad thing? In my view, prisonisation cannot be treated as a purely negative phenomenon. Given the unlimited duration of life imprisonment, I decided to formulate my own definition of this concept. By prisonisation I mean a process that the inmate has to face upon entering prison. It is a way of contributing to the conditions found on arrival: the inmate with his or her personality and past experiences plus the prison environment (other inmates and prison staff). Let me emphasise that everyone influences everyone else to some degree in a prison environment. The purpose of the research described in the article was to see how prisoners serving life sentences ‘prisonise’. My division of inmates according to the length of the served sentence was supposed to reflect the meaning of time in their lives – whether the inmates ‘blended into’ the penitentiary system as time went by.I assumed that the way prisoners sentenced to life coped in prison depended on how they assessed their chances of obtaining parole. This is important because looking ahead into the future determines how a convict serves their sentence, i.e. how the process of their prisonisation will unfold. Secondly, I assumed that in the case of ‘life’ prisoners, prisonisation was a desired process. Assuming that such inmates will spend all of their life in prison, it is difficult to conceive of prisonisation not taking place. Moreover, lack of prisonisation would pose a serious difficulty in serving the sentence. Taking into account the time factor in prisonisation, I determined that my research had to reflect the experience of inmates at different stages of their sentences. I divided a group of 15 convicts into five sub-groups of three. I set point ‘zero’ for my calculations at the date of the final judgment condemning each individual to life. Thus emerged a picture of inmates sentenced to life imprisonment across different time windows.I conducted 15 open interviews with inmates serving life sentences using my own questionnaire. I also examined the penitentiary records (part B) of inmates who had agreed to be interviewed. This was necessary in order to reconstruct the inmates’ ‘pre-sentence’ and prison past as well as their present circumstances.Assuming that the actions and behaviour of life prisoners are determined by their perception of how likely they are to be released on parole, I developed the following categories:A. Blending into prison – the inmate puts down roots in prison. He/she feels well as a prisoner and sees no other place for him/herself. B. Sponger – uses his/her time in prison as he/she likes, insofar as possible. Doesn’t want to talk about the future and has no specific view on this matter. Focuses on him/herself in the present; the future will bring what it will.C. Light at the end of the tunnel – the inmate knows that the tunnel he/she is in is very long. This is why he/she realizes that he/she must simply inch through it (or march forward). He/she may make plans or find activities to bide the time. Nevertheless, there is a light at the end of the tunnel – a distant one, but a light nonetheless. D. I’m not here – the prisoner does not agree with the nature of the sentence they are serving or even questions their guilt with regard to the crime. He/she does not accept him/herself in the prisoner role and does not see prison as a place to live. He or she devises plans that help him/her survive, while being in denial of having to spend the rest of his/her life in prison. Clings to the world of freedom and feels him/herself a part of it.The ‘light at the end of the tunnel’ category appeared most frequently (7 out 15 interviewees in every group, i.e. at every stage of their sentence). This shows that at every stage of serving their sentence and regardless of the time they have already spent in prison, inmates want to maintain and nourish the hope that they will one day be free. Of course they adapt to prison life and even become ‘good prisoners’, yet one cannot say unequivocally that prisonisation kills their desire to live beyond the prison walls. Further, I present four important factors related to prisonisation:• Time – when serving an unlimited sentence it is extremely important to be active in prison. It is also interesting how inmates change with the passage of time. • Prison subculture – being part of a subculture is supposed to be a factor that increases prisonisation, but it turned out that the interviewees were not interested in being part of such a group. • The Prison Service and the inmate – the interviewees receive positive assessments and are regularly rewarded by their supervisors. Meanwhile, in the interviews the inmates said that there was no point resisting the Prison Service and that they saw benefits to maintaining good relations with staff.• Contacts with the outside world – the inmates maintain contacts with family through every possible channel – by phone, via visits or letters. Family is important for most of them. Sometimes they also have contacts with new acquaintances from outside the prison. There is no doubt that all of the inmates in the studied group of 15 are ‘prisonised’ in some way. They have adapted to the daily prison schedule and learned the rules. What is important, it is not possible to pigeonhole them depending on the length of their sentence. We would do well to recall Clemmer’s position that the process of prisonisation (and its consequences) depend first and foremost on an individual’s personality. It is therefore extremely important to consider every case in its individuality when reviewing parole applications.
Źródło:
Archiwum Kryminologii; 2017, XXXIX; 231-248
0066-6890
2719-4280
Pojawia się w:
Archiwum Kryminologii
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Zachowania korupcyjne osadzonych (wstępne wyniki badań)
Corrupt Practices of Prisoners (Initial Research Results)
Autorzy:
Pływaczewski, Emil W.
Szczygieł, Grażyna B.
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/698975.pdf
Data publikacji:
2006
Wydawca:
Polska Akademia Nauk. Instytut Nauk Prawnych PAN
Tematy:
korupcja
zachowania korupcyjne
służba więzienna
osadzony
corruption
corrupt practices
prisoners
prison service
Opis:
An analysis of the research questionnaires shows that most respondents (64%) think corruption is a significant problem of the Prison Service. Twenty-eight respondents (14%) quoted having received a corruption offer from a convict. If we consider the fact that one out of 7 respondents received a corruption offer and every second respondent thinks corruption is a significant issue, such an assessment does not reflect the experience of most people who deemed corruption a significant issue, but rather their feelings of threat or concern. Certainly, such feelings might be influenced by the multitude of such information in the media. In the newspapers, and inthe Penitentiary Forum which reaches every Prison Service member in particular, there are detailed accounts of specific cases of corrupt practices that were uncovered. As concerns corruption offers, we have to underline that they were twice more frequently addressed to warders than to counsellors. As stated in the survey, 19 warders and 9 counsellors admitted having received such offers. The fact that corruption offers were more often addressed at warders than counsellors might be explained to some extent by the fact that prisoners have more contact with the warders than the counsellors (prison yard, baths).
Źródło:
Archiwum Kryminologii; 2006, XXVIII; 299-311
0066-6890
2719-4280
Pojawia się w:
Archiwum Kryminologii
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Podstawy obligatoryjnego odroczenia wykonania kary pozbawienia wolności
Autorzy:
Tekliński, Jarosław
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1788317.pdf
Data publikacji:
2018-02-06
Wydawca:
Polska Akademia Nauk. Instytut Nauk Prawnych PAN
Tematy:
choroba psychiczna
ciężka choroba
odroczenie wykonania kary pozbawienia wolności
prawo krne wykonawcze
skazany
Służba Więzienna
zaburzenie psychiczne
zdrowie psychiczne
mental illness
severe illness
postponement of the execution of a prison sentence
executive criminal law
person sentenced
Prison Service
mental disorder
mental health
Opis:
Jedną z podstawowych zasad prawa karnego wykonawczego jest zasada bezzwłocznego wszczęcia postępowania wykonawczego (art. 9 § 1 k.k.w.). Bezzwłoczne wykonanie orzeczenia, szczególnie tego, które stanowi o bezwzględnej karze pozbawienia wolności, służy realizacji zasady humanitaryzmu i poszanowania godności ludzkiej skazanego (art. 4 § 1 k.k.w.). Odroczenie wykonania kary jest jednym z nielicznych odstępstw od zasady wyrażonej w art. 9 § 1 k.k.w., przy czym zważywszy na jej wyjątkowy charakter, przepisy statuujące ustawowe przesłanki jej stosowania nie podlegają wykładni rozszerzającej. Dzieje się tak za sprawą tego, że odroczenie wykonania kary bez istnienia ważkich przyczyn narusza zarówno wspomnianą zasadę bezzwłocznego wykonania wyroku, jak i konstytucyjną zasadę osądzenia sprawy bez nieuzasadnionej zwłoki (art. 45 ust. 1 Konstytucji RP), czy rozpatrzenia sprawy w rozsądnym terminie (art. 6 ust. 1 Konwencji o Ochronie Praw Człowieka i Podstawowych Wolności). Niniejszy artykuł stanowi próbę kompleksowego spojrzenia na problematykę materialnych podstaw obligatoryjnego odroczenia wykonania kary pozbawienia wolności. Analiza obowiązującego porządku prawnego, przeprowadzona przez pryzmat oceny zarówno orzecznictwa, jak i poglądów doktryny, doprowadza autora do konkluzji, że obecna regulacja jest wadliwa i de lege ferenda wymaga pilnych zmian, w kierunku przez niego zaproponowanym.
One of the basic principles of executive criminal law is the principle of immediate enforcement proceedings (art. 9 § 1 k.k.w.). Immediate enforcement of the verdict, especially the one which provides for the absolute penalty of imprisonment, is for the implementation of the principle of humanity and respect for the human dignity of the convicted person (art. 4 § 1 k.w.w.).Postponement of the execution of a sentence is one of the few exceptions to the rule expressed in art. 9 § 1 k.k.w., however, considering its exceptional character, provisions stating the statutory conditions for its application are not subject to an extended interpretation. This is due to the fact that postponing the execution of a penalty without serious grounds violates both the aforementioned principle of immediate enforcement of the sentence and the constitutional principle of trial without unreasonable delay (article 45 section 1 of the Constitution of the Republic of Poland) or consideration of the case within a reasonable period (article 6 section1 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms). This article is an attempt to look at the issue of material basis for obligatory postponement of imprisonment. The analysis of the current legal order, carried out through the prism of assessing both case-law and doctrinal views, leads the author to the conclusion that the current regulation is flawed and de lege ferenda requires urgent changes in the direction proposed by him.
Źródło:
Studia Prawnicze; 2018, 4 (216); 165-202
0039-3312
2719-4302
Pojawia się w:
Studia Prawnicze
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
    Wyświetlanie 1-3 z 3

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