Prospectus

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Punishment and Prisons

Course
2018-2019

Admission requirements

Students who want to take this course need to be admitted to the Criminology & Criminal Justice master’s programme.

Description

This course aims to make students aware of the explanations, social consequences and guiding principles of punishment, comparing different contexts, cultures and countries. During the lectures, attention will be paid to the theoretical assumptions, normative implications and empirical knowledge on punishment and prisons, in comparative perspective. During the seminars, students will be stimulated to analyse and compare key developments on the different topics mentioned above.

Imprisonment is the most severe form of punishment available in countries without the death penalty. It is also widely used; the global prison population has grown rapidly over recent decades and currently exceeds 10 million. In many countries, prisoners are housed in overcrowded conditions. Given the heavy reliance on imprisonment as a sanction, it is important to understand what goes on inside prisons and how this affects those subjected to imprisonment. How do staff maintain order and exercise their power in prison? How do staff-prisoner dynamics and prison conditions affect the pains of imprisonment? What are the effects of imprisonment on prisoners’ well-being and their lives after imprisonment? This course will explore these topics in detail and also consider variations in prison experiences across countries and populations. Furthermore, in addition to the sociology of prison life, students will learn about relevant legal frameworks and current debates on, for example, life imprisonment and prison privatisation.

Both the range and the use of community sanctions and measures have increased significantly in most states in Europe and North America, but only for a small part as a replacement for imprisonment. As a consequence, impressive numbers of people are put under some form of supervision in the community nowadays, but theoretical background, aims and the legal framework of these developments are only scarcely studied at a comparative level. At the same time, alternatives for imprisonment are still lacking or not effectively used outside the Western World. Finally, high recidivism rates and the public call for security have put the effectiveness of punishment high on the political agenda, but heavy debate continues concerning the best methods to achieve the aim of crime reduction. This course, then, will enable students to critically evaluate the use of punishment in modern society.

Course objectives

Objectives of the course
By the end of this course, students should be able to:

  • Demonstrate a critical understanding of the function of punishment and prisons in society, prison life, and the impact of prisoners’ rights in national and international law on prison conditions

  • Analyse the legitimacy of imprisonment in general and specific cases of imprisonment, using a combination of legal and social scientific sources

  • Understanding aims and functions of non-custodial sentences, explain its growth and evaluate its potential to replace imprisonment

  • Describe and explain the extent to which punishment has a differential impact on vulnerable and minority groups and how this may vary across countries

  • Evaluate the effectiveness of punishment in terms of various indicators

Timetable

The timetable of this course can be found in uSis.

Mode of instruction

Lectures

  • Number of (2 hour) lectures: 6

  • Names of lecturers: dr. E.F.J.C. van Ginneken / prof. mr. dr. M.M. Boone

  • Required preparation by students: reading will be communicated in advance via the course handbook and blackboard

Seminars

  • Number of (2 hour) seminars: 3

  • Names of instructors: dr. E.F.J.C. van Ginneken / prof. mr. dr. M.M. Boone

  • Required preparation by students: reading will be communicated in advance via the course handbook and blackboard

Other methods of instruction

  • Field trip (1 day)

  • Weekly office hours.

  • Students who wish to ask a question during office hours should send an email to the secretarial office (criminologie@law.leidenuniv.nl) at least one day (24 hours) in advance with a short description of the reason.

Assessment method

Examination form(s)

  • 1 written assignment and presentation (50%)

  • 1 final paper (50%)

Submission procedures
All assignments are submitted via turnitin (Blackboard).

  • All requirements mentioned above have to be met and the two components of the final grade should be at least a 5.5 in order to complete the course successfully. If this is not the case, the lowest partial grade will be registered as final grade.

  • There will be a resit for both assessments.

  • The partial exams that have been finished with a passing grade, will be valid up to and including the academic year following the year in which the grade has been achieved. To this there is one exception: when the learning objectives, content, design or examination of a course has been changed, the course coordinator can decide that the validity of the partial exam concerned has expired due to didactic reasons. This will be stated in the course description of the academic year in which the change(s) will be implemented.

Blackboard

More information on this course is offered in Blackboard.

Reading list

Mandatory and recommended reading will be listed in the course handbook and on Blackboard.

Registration

Students have to register for courses and exams through uSis.

Contact information

  • Coordinator: dr. E.F.J.C. van Ginneken

  • Availability: Monday till Friday, through the secretariat

  • Telephone: 071 – 527 74 62

  • E-mail: criminologie@law.leidenuniv.nl

Institution/division

  • Institute: Criminal Law and Criminology

  • Department: Criminology

  • Opening hours: 09.00 to 12.30

  • Telephone secretariat: 071 – 527 74 62

  • Room number: B3.11

  • E-mail: criminologie@law.leidenuniv.nl

Remarks

During this course, a field trip to a prison will be organized to introduce students to a practical perspective. Additionally, the course equips students with the ability to independently assess criminal justice issues from a comparative perspective, which prepares for employment in the policy sector and with international (criminal justice) organizations.