Engelsk titel: Punished and isolated: disabled prisoners in Norway
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Författare:
Haualand, Hilde
Email: hilde.haualand@fafo.no
Språk: Eng
Antal referenser: 34
Dokumenttyp:
Artikel
UI-nummer: 16023119
Sammanfattning
Serving a sentence has two purposes in Norway; it is a punishment for a crime and it is
considered as an opportunity for rehabilitation to prevent repeated crime. This presupposes that all
prisoners have access to activities and common rooms in the prisons. Interviews with prisoners with
hearing or mobility impairments showed that accessibility is a problem in many prisons. The
experiences of prisoners with hearing or mobility impairment show that lack of awareness and
preparedness for their situation causes isolation as well as a decline in physical and mental health.
Some prisons had cells partially adapted for prisoners with disabilities - and these were mostly
located in high-security units. A majority of Norwegian prisons have some experience with disabled
prisoners, but there are no systems for knowledge accumulation or sharing within the Norwegian
Correctional Service. Lack of accessibility also deprived some disabled prisoners of their legal right
to progression of the conditions for serving their sentences, and they served under more severe
conditions for longer periods than non-disabled prisoners. Due to the lack of accommodation and
access to health care and rehabilitation measures in prisons, they run the risk of serving a sentence
without access to rehabilitation.