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Raising standards and delivering new approaches
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Raising standards and delivering new approaches in resettlement Marie Orrell Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Prisons
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H.M. Inspectorate of Prisons Provide independent scrutiny of the conditions for and treatment of prisoners and other detainees. Also have a statutory responsiblility to inspect all immigration and removal centres along with short term holding facilities Chief Inspector is independent of Prison Service Research Team plus approximately 28 inspectors 5 teams
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The four tests of a healthy prison Safety Respect Purposeful Activity Resettlement NB Each prison receives a scored assessment against each test
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Offender profile from SEU 2002 At least 1 in 5 have hidden disabilities 52% of men and 71% of women have NO qualifications 67% are unemployed Compared to an 11-year old: 80% have fewer writing skills, 65% lower numeracy skills and 50% read less well 60-70% are using drugs 13 times more likely to have been in care 14 times more likely to have been unemployed 10 times more likely to have truanted Only 5% of children remain in the family home if the mother is sentenced to imprisonment
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National Reducing Re-offending Delivery Board Accommodation Attitudes, Thinking and Behaviour Children, Families and Community Support Drugs and Alcohol Employment, Learning and Skills Finance, Benefit and Debt Physical and Mental Health
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Partnership Work under pathways is delivered by public, private and voluntary sector Must be ‘joined up’ to achieve results Some pathways especially critical: –Employment can reduce risk of re-offending from 33-50% –Stable housing can reduce re-offending by more than 20%
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Accommodation NFA Services available to support prisoners on reception and preparing for release Becoming a better tenant Wrap- around projects- e.g. employment and accommodation Peer advice projects Links to Community Chaplaincy projects for vulnerable prisoners
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Attitudes, thinking and behaviour Range of accredited and non-accredited interventions available Citizenship Staff and mentors as ‘pro-social models’ Empathic support- peer advisors Active participation in sentence planning Self value and achievement is recognised Support through transition
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Children and families Ease of contact- phone calls and regular visits Visits- family days, homework clubs, Storybook Dads, environment Services for families- finance, accommodation, support on release Family involvement with sentence planning Family celebration of religious festivals Awareness of special needs- links to local faith/ethnic communities
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Drugs and alcohol Transition to relevant services Appropriate support Freedom in funding Problems with reduced funding for IDTS
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Employment, learning and skills Effective links with employers- local and strategic Meeting skills gaps-increasing employability Release on temporary licence Preparation for employment Maintaining learning Ongoing support for employers
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Finance, benefit and debt Support on reception and release Opening bank accounts- being ‘job ready’ Paying off arrears Money management Discharge packs for release
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Physical and mental health Referral/handover to GP’s Medication on release Referral to specialist services Support- mentors/volunteers
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What makes it happen? Manageable population size, close enough to home Capacity to move prisoners to relevant interventions Agencies that can be flexible and respond quickly to emerging need Quality services that aren’t ‘led’ by personalities Non-judgemental approach Adequate, long term funding Strategic understanding of ‘fit’ i.e. into RRDP Projects that can move to scale quickly Ownership by strategic boards e.g. LSP’s, LAA’s Evaluation
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Useful websites www.inspectorates.justice.gov.uk/hmiprisons www.noms.homeoffice.gov.uk www.hmprisonservice.gov.uk
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