Leaders | Criminal justice

Decarceration is the key to better prisons

Britain is not the only rich country that needs a radical change in approach

Hands holding prison's bars on a pink background
Illustration: Hokyoung Kim

“Clearly, OUR prisons are not working.” At one level David Gauke, a former Conservative justice secretary, who on October 22nd was appointed by Britain’s Labour government to run a sentencing review, was stating the obvious. Britain’s prisons are scarred by overcrowding and violence. Staff have suffered almost 10,000 assaults in the past year. Unsurprisingly, retaining them is difficult; only half have more than five years’ experience. Instead, teenage officers are being deployed alone on prison wings. Most new recruits do not last even two years.

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This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “The key to better prisons ”

From the October 26th 2024 edition

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