The Scotsman

Inside Justice

Scotland’s treatment of offenders is at a crossroads, writes Karyn Mccluskey

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I’ve been engaging with lots of great modern studies students and teachers in Scotland. A few students tweeted about their essays on what we should do about the high prison population, overcrowdi­ng and high reoffendin­g rate. If only we could give the answer in 280 characters.

So here are some facts about prisons in Scotland: we are at the highest prison population for ten years; there is a huge evidence base about what works to reduce offending.

Some people really need to be in prison, some of them for a long time, but a significan­t number could serve sentences in the community, receive much-needed treatment, gains skills and have a better chance of a safe and productive life.

I’ve been working in this area for such a long time and I know what I would change if I could, but what about you? What is it that you want Scotland to do about our sky-rocketing prison population?

Do you want to build another prison? The new HMP Berwyn in Wales is costing £250 million to build. There are around 2,000 places in this new prison. It costs £40,000 per place every year – that’s £80m a year to run a prison for 2,000 people.

What else could you spend £80m on? Well, how about parenting support, health services, housing, youth services, mentoring, more visible community payback. How about spending it on evidence-based programmes designed to get people off the justice hamster wheel and into jobs, education, stable housing and allowing them to contribute to society?

Do you want to increase sentences – lock people up for longer to teach them a lesson never to do it again? It’s an understand­able instinct, but relying on the deterrent effect of prison sentences as a tactic to reduce offending not only flies in the face of all the evidence but would make the problem worse, swelling the prison population further, straining already stretched resources and increasing the pressure on the public purse. Which would be the least of the problems we would face.

Or do you want to do something different? A new paradigm based on the best evidence and the most effective methods of what cuts crime, reduces the number of victims and swells our community with healthy people who pay taxes and raise the next generation with resilience and hope?

This is not beyond us – we have a theoretica­l base and there are internatio­nal examples of how it can work. It’s been done elsewhere and we can do it here. So what’s stopping us?

The plaudits we’ve received of late about our successes in violence reduction, youth custody and use of community sentences can’t go to our heads. The reality is that despite crime rates falling, our prison population is above 8,000, the highest in a decade. The prisons crisis in England and Wales may have been hogging the headlines, but we are up there with them – our incarcerat­ion rate jostles with them for pole position and is among the highest in Europe.

We are at a crossroads. And it is in our hands about which road we choose to follow. So which is it? Do we build prisons designed to house tomorrow the seven-year-olds of today? Or do we build our children a future – and a country – which is the safest in the world? But time is of the essence and the time for navel-gazing is over. If we want change, the time to act is now. So tell me, what would you choose?

Karyn Mccluskey is chief executive of Community Justice Scotland

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