ABSTRACT
Prison evolved as an institution for punishing those who offend society. Brutality and other forms of inhuman treatment were associated with prison, but as from the 19th Century AD beginning with England, prison started becoming human resource recovery
institutions that retrain errant to become good citizens on release. The perennial problem of recidivism in the Nigerian prison system over the decades calls for concern from the public. Studies found most inmates to be semi-literate individuals who do not acquire any handiwork and have not been trained in any trade before their imprisonment; such inmates find it difficult to adjust into the society on release. This study therefore evaluates inmates’ achievements in art education as an attempt to empower inmates with skills to live self-sustainable lives after release. 40 out of 122 inmates were selected (representing 32.7% sample size) using interest (simple random sampling technique). Inmates participated in the ten weeks ex post facto method, data was collected in form of art test scores from male inmates of Makurdi Medium Security Prison, Benue State-Nigeria. Descriptive statistics and t-test were used to analyze the quantitative data while the data collected through observation were analyzed qualitatively. The study revealed on the average that the level of prisoners’ achievement in learning art was high. There was a significant difference in the study of art education in prison setting. Inmates’ performance in Information Communication Technology was poor due to low level education and inmates who had shorter discharge dates showed laxity and lacked concentration, as they saw no need to learn anything new.
CHAPTER ONE
1.1. BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY:
Every society in history is believed to have evolved or enacted some aspect of rules which it expects its citizens to obey. When these laws are disobeyed, society used different methods of corrections to reprimand such erring members. These methods of corrections in the time past, ranged from sending offenders on exile, lashing them and confiscation of their properties to mention but a few.
The initial records of prison came from Mesopotamia and Egypt from the 1st Millennium BC. During those times, prisons were often constructed in underground dungeons where guilty or suspected criminals spent their lives either awaiting death penalty or a command from the authority to become slaves. With the emergence of modern civilization around the
3rd Millennium BC, almost every major ancient civilization adopted concept of prisons as means to detain and remove personal freedom of incarcerated people. In those early periods in history, prisons were often used as temporary stop-gap before sentencing such prisoners to death or misery life of slavery. It was only in Greece that prisoners were not held in dungeons but rather in poorly isolated buildings, where their families and friends could visit them. In ancient Rome, prisons were built exclusively underground with tight and claustrophobic passages and cells. Prisoners were heavily used by the Roman government in the past as support workforce sometimes called the Gladiators or Ludus (Prison, 2010).
As time passed, prisons started morphing into correctional institutions that began to implement the concept of rehabilitation and reform of prisoners. In Europe, the English royalty, Henry II, commissioned the first prison in 1166 AD, when he noticed the harsh conditions of prisoners. He also went ahead to draft the first English legal system that used
the concept of judges to determine cases. Prison History (2013) noted that by 1215 AD, King John signed ‘Magna Carta’, a prison legislation, which stated that no man could be imprisoned without trial. This historic event marked the turning point in prison history world- wide as modern prisons started reforms in line with the English standard. Egu (1990, p.4) observe that ‘‘emphasis at this period was shifted to improvement of the prisoners’ lot’’. The world-wide humanizing attitude towards prisoners also started at this time, and the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for crime prevention and treatment of offenders adopted in
1955 also influenced many countries towards this new direction. Prison (2010) in their assertion warned that;
As an aspect of human rights… people who are imprisoned do not cease to be human beings, no matter how serious the associated crime. This is in line with the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights Article 10, which stated that all persons deprived of their liberty, shall be treated with humanity and with respect for the inherent dignity of the human person… (Prison, 2010)
Human Rights group have already assumed that, the deprivation of personal liberty (imprisonment) is the operative punishment and that; it should not be augmented by unnecessarily restrictive conditions in the name of secure custody.
Imprisonment as a form of punishing offenders was not new to many pre-colonial communities in Africa. In Nigeria, different communities had their own legitimate methods of dealing with deviant members of their societies. Egu (1990) observed that Ogboni Kose among the Yoruba states, Ewedos in the Bini Kingdom, Yaris in the Fulani Caliphate showed evidence of functional equivalents of prisons before the modern era.
The establishment of Broad Street Prison, Lagos in 1872, marked the beginning of modern prison system in Nigeria. The progressive British penetration into every nook and cranny of Nigeria brought many prison establishments; the aim at that time was to deal with any one opposing the British rule and interest. According to Orakwe (2012) the colonial prison at that stage was not designed to reform anyone. Instead, prisoners were in the main, used for public works and other menial jobs for the colonial administration which lacked personnel. He maintained that prisons were poorly run, and that the local prison conditions varied from one place to another in disorganization, callousness and exploitation of their inmates. The result was that the prisons served the purpose of punishing those who had the guts to be in opposition against the colonial administration. The prisons were also used as a warning signal to those who might want to cause trouble for the British colonial government.
The prison regulation of 1917 did not specify any particular type of treatment of the inmates; it merely represented policy statements. Mr. R. H. Dolan, an experienced prison administrator, was appointed Director of the Nigerian Prisons Service in 1946. He initiated revolutionary changes in the Nigerian prisons which includes Vocational Training in 1949 as a cardinal part of a penal treatment in Nigeria. He also launched the introduction of Moral and Adult Educational classes (Orakwe, 2012).
Prison Legislation – Decree No. 9 of 1972 and Laws of the Federation-Prisons Act CAP
366 of 1990 spelt out the goals of the Nigerian Prisons Service as taking custody of those legally detained; identifying causes of their behaviour and retraining them to become useful citizens in the society; as well as generating revenue for the government. Even though, the decree makes secure custody of the inmates the first role of the prisons, Nigeria Prisons Service (NPS, 2013) note that reform and rehabilitation are the ultimate aims of the Nigerian
Prisons Service. Olusina, (2013) found that as laudable as the cardinal objectives of the NPS
reform agenda are, they were far from the reality on the ground.
In spite of the influence of the reformation, rehabilitation and correctional programmes initiated in the Nigeria Prisons Service since 1917, which became operational in 1949 to date, Tanimu (2010, p.150) aptly observed that ‘‘the current facilities and programmmes of the prison are outdated, unsuitable, and irrelevant to the declared reformative and rehabilitative ideals’’.
Santos (2010, p.14) amplified that ‘‘once in the system, prisoners have few opportunities to improve their lives…it lacks a mechanism that would inspire prisoners’’ to get empowered and to get genuine rehabilitation. Chukwumerije (2012) in his presentation of Prison Act Amendment Bill 2012 at the National Assembly, Abuja, contended that the Prison Act was outdated, unable to define the purposes of imprisonment, silent on the crucial service of
reformation/rehabilitation and archaic in its concept of revenue mobilization. The 2nd
Biennial Conference held in Kampala, Uganda, in 2013, the Heads of African Corrections Services Association – ACSA (2013) in a communiqué at the end of their meeting also acknowledged the deficiencies in existing rehabilitation programmes in Africa, including Nigeria.
According to Tanimu, (2010, p.143), ‘‘A typical inmate in Nigerian prison is a semi-literate male, in the prime of his youth, occupationally; he is either unemployed or an apprentice in the lowest occupational ladder’’. Some of the inmates hardly write nor understand instructions in English well. A study by the New York Senate also uphold these views that the majority of state prisoners have no high school diploma and a large proportion of them are unable to read… many of the Max security prisons in the US are populated with males with little or very few employable skills (Questia, 2013).
Several studies (Obiandu, 2013; Omale, 2011; Orakwe, 2010; Santos, 2010, & Tanimu, 2010) have demonstrated that there is need to provide for more functional and adequate educational and occupational facilities and programmes in our prisons. Only recently, the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation – CDCR, 2007), released a working document after assessing its prisons, which partly state:
Rehabilitation has become the operative course in the departments goal of reducing recidivism … and that incarcerating inmates with the out dated practices of the past has become untenable considering the realities of the present. We are looking at many new and innovative options to provide programs for inmates.
The Reformer Magazine in 2013 noted that the time was ripe to push for the reform of the prison in order to create a prison system that was consistent with the democratic aspirations of the new Nigeria, ‘‘in line with the global shift from the philosophy of punishment in prisons to that of corrections’’ (Chukwuneke, 2012, p.22).
Gussak (1997) looked at the prison system and opined that there seems to be a natural tendency for artistic and creative expressions in prison setting. The arts have been part of life from the very beginning. Glastonbury Schools’ (2013) observed that the arts have described, defined, and deepened human experiences. People of all races and periods in history have an abiding need for meaning. Who am I? What must I do? Where am I going? Simultaneously, the arts initiate change, challenge old perspectives from fresh angles of vision. Arts also offer unique interpretations of familiar ideas. The arts link hope to memory inspiring courage and making our tragedies bearable.
Art activity can be the perfect vehicle for revealing the complexities of the human condition especially those in incarceration. Guardian Art and Design (2007, p.5) programme alleged
that art and creative activity is underestimated in mainstream prison life. Yet can so often provide the key to a better way of thinking. Gussak and Virshup (1997) carried out an investigation on art therapy and highlighted the following as benefits to inmates:
Taking advantage of creativity inherent in the prison society
Preventing diversion and escape
Promoting inadvertent unconsciousness disclosure
By passing rigid defences including pervasive dishonesty.
Gussak (2004) also claimed that art therapy helps to alleviate mental health issues that are exacerbated in such unhealthy environments. Prison friendly countries like Canada, Britain, Australia etc. all used art education as cardinal part of their penal treatment in reformation, rehabilitation and reintegration which has taken them to where they are today. Allison (2000) strongly urged that the first step we must take is to change the function; operation and reality of what correctional institutions represent; corrections must become human resource recovery system. According to the Federal Ministry of Education (FME, 2012), the revised 9-Year Basic Education Curriculum address Cultural & Creative Arts amongst other things ‘‘poverty eradication, human rights education, entrepreneurship and life skills and innovation… from primary schools to junior secondary school levels’’ (FME, 2012). All these are efforts to consolidate the study of Visual arts, Painting & Décor, Dying & Bleaching, Photography and Craft practice at the senior secondary school level in Nigeria as a way of skill acquisition and fighting perennial unemployment in the country. Why has Nigerian government suddenly become conscious of art education being a catalyst for empowerment and tackling unemployment in the country? The answer may not be farfetched; Art education is a means of assisting personal growth and development in skill acquisition and discipline. Researchers have written much about the prison rehabilitation, but no known work has really addressed
Art Education as a factor for empowerment of inmates in Nigerian prison.
Asokhia and Agbonluae (2013, p.226) opined that ‘’there is no better way to help prison inmates re-enter the larger society successfully and break the in-and-out of jail cycle than provide them with skills that they need to succeed in the outside world’’. Grant (2006) suggested two main goals for teaching art in prisons; teach skills and discipline as well as developing a creative outlet for personal expressions other than violence. In some advanced nations like Australia, Britain and USA, vocational and creative arts have been found to be very successful in prison settings in preventing idleness, empowering inmates in ways that are self-sustainable as seen during anniversary prison art exhibitions, national art galleries or prison art projects in communities of such countries. It is on the premise of the forgoing that this study was conducted to test the efficacy of learning art by inmates in the Nigerian Prison system using ex post facto and participant observer model. It is this same humane reasoning and action that brought about improvements in prison, beginning from England and other nations, philanthropic organizations and well meaning individuals all over the world that culminated into the human face which the prison system started wearing today.
1.2. STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM:
Some prisoners do not have any handiwork and have not been trained in any trade before their imprisonment. Such people find it difficult to re-integrate into the society after serving their prison sentences. Studies by Tanimu, 2010 and Omale, 2011 have confirmed that, an average inmate in the Nigerian Prison is a semi-literate youth without a work place skill. There is therefore, need to train prison inmates in different trades and crafts of the arts to enable them live a productive life after serving their prison sentences so that re-integration
with the larger society will no longer be a challenge, therefore recidivism will become minimal.
1.3. PURPOSE OF THE STUDY:
The study seeks to:
1. Investigate the level of prisoners’ achievement in learning art.
2. Test the abilities of inmates in the pre-test and post-test to see if there is a significant difference in learning art.
3. Investigate the difficulties inmates encounter in learning art.
1.4. RESEARCH QUESTIONS:
What is the level of prison inmates’ achievement in learning art?
Is there any significant difference in learning art by prison inmates? What are the difficulties prison inmates’ encounters in learning art?
1.5. SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY:
Education generally has the main goal of preparing an individual to be useful to himself and his society. Vocational education on the other hand is ‘‘any form of training which specifically furnishes an individual with some practical skills to perform his chosen career’’ (Denga, 1990, p.3). Art education as a vocational field enables the learner to explore alternative ways of communicating with others. The study will:
– Benefit the inmates by generating more meaningful and purposeful activities in prison thereby, preventing general idleness. It will also equip the inmates with requisite
skills that will empower and help them afterwards into the society. By this, recidivism of inmates will be at low ebb.
– Ginger Prison Authority and Government to evaluate the current prison educational and vocational units for better results.
– Make prison staff aware that secured walls do not give maximum security, but art programme which engages the mind and the hand more purposeful does.
– Benefit the general public by receiving disciplined and skilful inmates on discharge, thereby experiencing more peace and less crime in the society.
1.6. SCOPE AND LIMITATION TO THE STUDY:
The study concentrated in Medium Security Prison, Makurdi, Benue State of Nigeria. The justification for this institution was that, the inmates share similar attributes in terms of adult age (19 – 49 years), male sex, physical and social environment. The researcher was limited to include the Awaiting Trial Persons (ATPs) who are legally excluded from any rehabilitation treatment in Nigeria prisons. That Awaiting Trial Persons are not prisoners yet, they are ATPs in prison custody (Laws of the Federation-Prisons Act CAP 366, 1990; Decree No. 9,
1972; and Ibrahim, 2013). It is also worthy of note that, prison is a volatile security environment, therefore only one prison was considered for this study at this level.
1.7. KEY WORDS:
REHABILITATION is the restoration to useful life of a person sentenced to a prison term. Questia (2013) observed that inmates are not permanently criminal and that it is possible to restore them to a life in which they will contribute to themselves and to the society and to society around them. Ahire (1990) also referred to empowerment and rehabilitation to mean post release efforts made to make it easier for the offender to resettle in society.
INMATE also called prisoner is a legal term used to describe someone who is sent to prison on conviction or on remand using the legal procedure.
PRISON is a place in which people are physically confined and usually deprived of a range of personal freedoms. It may also refer to a place of confinement or captivity. Prisons could be used to house both convicted and suspected criminals.
ART EDUCATION is a means of assisting personal growth and development in skill acquisition and discipline, and is especially pertinent to those who offend. Djurichkovic (2011) said that there is value in learning art in prison for educating, improving and reforming individuals.
This material content is developed to serve as a GUIDE for students to conduct academic research
ART EDUCATION AS A FACTOR FOR EMPOWERMENT OF INMATES OF MAKURDI PRISON BENUE STATE NIGERIA>
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