Two
pieces of news this week got me thinking about anger in UK prisons.
Number one follows comments from the director of public prosecutions
Keir Starmer QC, who says its time to make benefit cheats serve
longer jail terms of up to 10 years. The second follows a Commons
Justice committee reports that says more elderly sex offenders are
being jailed than ever before.
Two
pieces of news that make me wonder what effect it'll have on the
well-being of all prisoners in the system. Will an influx of elderly
perverts tip the balance or will an increase in swindlers break the
camels back and push the UK prison population into the red mist?
After-all, convicted criminals aren't exactly known for their gentle
dispositions and tolerant natures.
Being
deprived of your freedom is punishment enough, but prisoners must
also deal with the constant supervision and control of their
movements and interactions. Locked behind bars for up to twenty-three
hours a day, left to stew over their own failings and stupidity, is
enough to make anyone angry. Angry at themselves, the world, the
system, their parents and God Almighty.
In
fact, prison is the perfect place for anger to grow and prosper.
Controlling
Anger in Prisons.
Anger
management programmes have enjoyed a varying degree of success in UK
prisons. At one point in 2006 the Home Office significantly scaled
back their anger management courses citing them to be
“counter-productive,' after a City financier was killed by a
prisoner who had just been released from prison after serving six
years for attempted murder. He attended twenty-four sessions of an
anger management course, which helped convince the parole board to
let him go free, but with hindsight it was argued, the course had
done nothing to tackle his violent behaviour.
From
nearly fifty different programmes available covering alcohol, sex,
reoffending and health programmes, prison chiefs acknowledge anger in
UK prisons is an on-going problem in which they are still looking for
solutions and programmes to deal with it.
Some
call in the services of therapeutic practitioners, who use yoga and
breathing techniques to help the men relax and control their
aggression, while others use more accredited programmes such as CALM
(Controlling Anger and Learning to Manage it) which is more of an
emotional management programme, to ART (Aggression Replacement
Training), which seeks to challenge offenders to accept
responsibility for their crime and its consequences, to TSP (Thinking
Skills Programme) which focuses on supporting offenders to develop
skills in setting goals and making plans to achieve them without
offending.
Mike
Fisher from the British Association of Anger Management (BAAM) is
also playing a role in UK prisons. Working alongside Linda Bolland
who runs programmes at HMP SEND in Surrey with excellent results, he
has recently been commissioned to run programmes in a London prison,
reducing reoffending rates amongst young offenders and defusing the
ticking time bombs about to explode in every prison cell.
What
makes prisoners happy?
Other
than being let out early or better yet, getting away with a suspended
sentence, a TV in their cell is a small luxury which no prisoner
would scoff at. Though a TV makes a prisoner very happy, it evokes
anger from the taxpayer, especially when its revealed hospital
patients are charged £42 a week for watching TV, while prisoners are
only charged £1 a week.
Striking
the happy medium of keeping prisoners happy and keeping those paying
for prisons happy is a delicate balancing act.
Its
a Catch 22.
Stress
leads to anger and anger leads stress, its a vicious circle. Being
able to identify your anger for what it is and having the tools to
step out of the circle of anger, is something anyone can achieve.
Mike
Fisher and BAAM has helped over 16,000 people nationwide deal with
their anger problems and continues to blaze new trails in the anger
management world.
To
learn more about what Mike Fisher offers check out his websites
www.stressexperts.co.uk, www.beatinganger.com and www.angerguru.com,
or better yet book yourself a space on his FREE 1 HOUR WEBINAR, on
Thursday 26th September 2013, between 7-8pm.
Follow
this link http://www.beatinganger.com/free-webinar for everything you
need to know.

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