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Penal system of Japan

The penal system of Japan (including prisons) is part of the criminal justice system of Japan. It is intended to resocialize, reform, rehabilitate and punish offenders. The penal system is operated by the Correction Bureau of the Ministry of Justice.

Tokyo Detention House in Katsushika, Tokyo

Procedure edit

On confinement, prisoners are first classified according to gender, nationality, type of penalty, length of sentence, degree of criminality, and state of physical and mental health. They are then placed in special programs designed to treat their individual needs.

Education edit

Prison education in Japan can be traced back to at least 1871, when practical ethics lectures were introduced into a prison in Tokyo.[1] Reading and writing classes began being implemented into the prison system on a larger scale by 1881. By the late 1880s, it was believed that ethics classes were the most important form of education for prisoners, and by the 1890s, education was considered one of the most important issues of the prison system. Conferences, mostly attended by prison staff, were held in 1889 and 1892 to discuss ways to improve education within the prison system. There was no unanimous agreement on the best way to implement moral education for prisoners, and different institutions began running their own individual programs.[2] In 1910, prison law in Japan ordered education be given to all juvenile inmates, and to any adult inmate deemed to have a need. Regulations stipulated two to four hours per day be set aside for education.[3] In 1952, correspondence courses were introduced into all prisons, and in 1955, a high school was established at Matsumoto juvenile prison for juvenile inmates who had not completed their compulsory education.[4] As of 2018, male prisoners nationwide can still be transferred on request to the school. There were six graduates in 2002, and three in 2018.[5][6]

Administration edit

The Correctional Bureau of the Ministry of Justice administers the adult prison system as well as the juvenile correctional system and three women's guidance homes (to rehabilitate sex workers). The ministry's Rehabilitation Bureau operates the probation and parole systems. Prison personnel are trained at an institute in Tokyo and in branch training institutes in each of the eight regional correctional headquarters under the Correctional Bureau. Professional probation officers study at the Legal Training and Research Institute of the Ministry. The prison guards in Japan do not carry firearms but can activate an alarm where specialized armed guards will come. There can be as low as one prison guard supervising 40 inmates while they are working.

Prison population edit

In 1990, Japan's prison population stood at somewhat less than 47,000; nearly 7,000 were in short-term detention centers, and the remaining 40,000 were in prisons. Approximately 46% were repeat offenders. Japanese recidivism was attributed mainly to the discretionary powers of police, prosecutors, and courts and to the tendency to seek alternative sentences for first offenders. By 2001, the overall prison population rose to 61,242[7] or 48 prisoners per 100,000. By the end of 2009, the prison population had yet again risen to 75,250, or 59 prisoners per 100,000.[8] One reason for the rise is a large increase in the number of elderly being convicted of crimes, with loneliness being cited as a major factor.[9][10]

Juvenile offenders edit

Although a few juvenile offenders are handled under the general penal system, most are treated in separate juvenile training schools. More lenient than the penal institutions, these facilities provide correctional education and regular schooling for delinquents under the age of twenty. More adults are in prison than child delinquents, mainly because of the low crime rate.

In Japan, juvenile prisoners are defined as people less than 20 years of age. All juvenile cases are first sent to a family court, where the judge may decide that the juvenile be tried by the ordinary court (as an adult). Juveniles not tried by an ordinary court are detained in juvenile training schools (typical juvenile correctional institutions); these prisoners represented 2,872 at the end of 2014. The 52 Juvenile institutions are under the responsibility of the prison administration. Minors under 18 years of age cannot be sentenced to the death penalty. Juvenile prisoners make up 4.5% of the prison population.[11]

Aftercare treatment edit

According to the Ministry of Justice, the government's responsibility for social order does not end with imprisoning an offender, but also extends to aftercare treatment and to noninstitutional treatment to substitute for or supplement prison terms.

A large number of those given suspended sentences are released to the supervision of volunteer officers under the guidance of professional probation officers. Adults are usually placed on probation for a fixed period, and juveniles are placed on probation until they reach the age of twenty.

Foreign inmates edit

The number of crimes committed by foreigners significantly decreased in recent years from 43,622 in 2005 to 15,276 in 2016. Most common offenses committed by foreigners were theft (60% of their Penal Code offenses), immigration violations (66% of non-Penal code offenses), and drug offenses in 2016.

The number of convicted foreign prisoners was 3,509 in 2016. Yet, most of them were given suspended sentences and only 744 were imprisoned in the same year. The largest group was thieves (122 people) and the second largest was drug offenders (96 people).

Use of volunteers edit

Volunteers are also used in supervising parolees, although professional probation officers generally supervise offenders considered to have a high risk of recidivism. Volunteers hail from all walks of life and handle no more than five cases at one time. They are responsible for overseeing the offenders' conduct to prevent the occurrence of further offenses. Volunteer probation officers also offer guidance and assistance to the ex-convict in assuming a law-abiding place in the community.

Although volunteers are sometimes criticized for being too old compared with their charges (more than 70 percent are retired and are age fifty-five or over) and thus unable to understand the problems their charges faced, most authorities believe that the volunteers are critically important in the nation's criminal justice system.

Convict labour edit

Assigned labour is considered a priority in Japan's correctional system. By law, if a prisoner refuses work or neglects their labour responsibility, punishment is to be implemented. Work hours consist of eight hours each day over the Monday-Friday period and four hours on Saturdays – although individual cases may extend or limit these procedures. In most prisons, inmates who perform paid work are paid for their activity.[12] The money earned by inmates through prison labour in Japan is not "owned" by the inmate until they are released from incarceration. Instead, income is placed into a specialised bank account with only a small amount being available for prisoner use to purchase essential items from the prison store. Permission may also be granted for inmates to use this saved amount toward fines, lawsuit fees and alimony.[13]

Depending on an inmate's classification, occupational training is also a feature of Japan's correctional system. Intended to prepare prisoners for their release into society, prison institutions may offer training in dry cleaning, automobile repairs, photo typography, carpentry and leatherwork. These opportunities are based on prisoner requests and may or may not be accepted by prison authorities.[12] Prisoners in Japan are also able to undertake factory work (e.g., assembling machinery, fabricating parts) for external manufacturers through contracted arrangements. As opposed to outsourcing labour to China-based factories, manufacturers subcontract their factory work to prisons to save shipping and production costs.[14]

Former US Marine Rodrico Harp, who was sentenced to seven years hard labor for his part in the infamous 1995 Okinawa rape incident, served his sentence at Kurihama prison near Yokosuka, and described fabricating car parts for Mazda and Nissan for a salary of less than $30 a month during his incarceration in an interview with Stars and Stripes after his release.

International criminal defense lawyer Michael Griffith is a well known critic of the practice, saying: "They don't have to recruit these workers. They don't have to insure them, or give them sick pay, or fulfil any of the obligations that they would in a regular factory. They know that their workers can never complain, or join a trade union, or get headaches, or take time off. Why should these companies get the benefit of convict labour? It is sheer, naked exploitation, and it is a disgrace in any country that calls itself a civilised democracy."[15]

In June 1994, Griffith made submissions to the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives along with his client Christopher Lavinger, who previously served 16 months in Fuchū Prison for drug possession. Lavinger described to the Committee his experiences of making an array of commercial products in the prison factory, including electronic components for SEGA, for a salary of less than twenty cents an hour.[16] Thomas Klitgaard, senior vice president and general counsel of SEGA USA, later stated that one of 300 subcontractors retained by SEGA Japan had used prison labor to assemble nine pin connector plugs for some SEGA games, but that the practice had subsequently been detected and stopped.[17]

Claims of inmate rights abuses edit

Amnesty International has cited Japan for abuse of inmates by guards for infractions of prison rules. This abuse is in the form of beatings, solitary confinement, overcrowding, or "minor solitary confinement" (keiheikin), which forces inmates to be interned in tiny cells kneeling or crossed legged, and restrained with handcuffs for prolonged periods of time.[18]

In 2003, Justice Ministry formed a special team to investigate 1,566 prisoner deaths from 1993 to 2002. A preliminary report suggested that nearly one-third of the cases involved suspicious circumstances. However, in June, the Ministry announced that there was evidence of abuse only in the two Nagoya fatalities. Regarding the other suspicious deaths, the Ministry said that approximately 10 deaths could be attributed to poor medical care. The authorities reported they had lost the documentation on nine deaths in Tokyo's Fuchu Prison. The remaining deaths were determined to be "not suspicious."[19]

In the wake of prison abuses, the "Law Concerning Penal Institutions and the Treatment of Sentenced Inmates" came into effect on June 7, 2007, to reform treatment on prisoners,[20][21][22] such as "the expansion of prisoners' contacts with the outside world, the establishment of independent committees to inspect prisons, and the improvement of the complaints mechanisms."[23] However, the Japan Federation of Bar Associations (JFBA) expressed concerns in 2010 about revalidating unlimited solitary confinements (along with newer types of handcuffs for such inmates), not providing medical care for inmates under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare, and mental and physical effects of confinement for death row inmates.[23]

In the article " 'Prison Libraries' in Japan: The Current Situation of Access to Books and Reading in Correctional Institutions" Kenichi Nakane talks about another form of prisoner neglect/abuse. Nakane's article finds that there is a severe lack of reading materials available to people who are incarcerated in Japanese correctional facilities. The author Kenichi Nakane uses the term "Prison Library" because there are no professionally run libraries inside of any of the correctional facilities. Nakane finds that incarcerated persons can only get books, newspapers, and magazines by buying them and/or getting them as gifts. Nakane found that occasionally a limited number of reading materials are supplied, but they are out dated and inadequate. Nakane also finds the lack of reading material and availability of information in these incarceration facilities to be hindering some of the rights of the incarcerated individuals. To further investigate this problem, Kenichi Nakane traveled to twenty-six prisons in America and seven prisons in the United Kingdom and found that the availability of books, and information to incarcerated individuals in Japan was very limited compared to US and UK prisons.[24]

Penal institutions edit

Japanese "penal institutions" include prisons for sentenced adults, juvenile detention centers for sentenced juveniles, and detention houses for pre-trial inmates.[25]

In Japan, there are 62 prisons, 7 juvenile prisons, 52 juvenile classification homes, 52 juvenile training schools, 10 Detention Houses, 8 regional parole boards, and 50 probation offices.

Prisons edit

Different types of prisoners are sent to different prisons. For example, the Fuchu Prison (Tokyo) and Yokohama Prison (Kanagawa) receive inmates that have advanced criminal inclination with sentences shorter than 10 years – e.g., prisoners affiliated with crime organizations. The Chiba Prison received inmates without advanced criminal inclination and who do not have sentences longer than 10 years – e.g., murder without the possibility of repeating a crime again. Ichihara Prison (Chiba) is specialized for traffic offenders – e.g., repetitive offenders and those who killed others while driving.

Sapporo Correctional Precinct edit

Sendai Correctional Precinct edit

Tokyo Correctional Precinct edit

Nagoya Correctional Precinct edit

Osaka Correctional Precinct edit

Hiroshima Correctional Precinct edit

Takamatsu Correctional Precinct edit

Fukuoka Correctional Precinct edit

Detention houses edit

Medical facilities edit

Private Finance Initiative edit

Private Finance Initiative (PFI) prisons are maintained with private management. PFI prisons, which are for sentenced inmates with low criminal tendencies, include:[31]

  • Harima Rehabilitation Program Center (播磨社会復帰促進センター)Kakogawa, Hyogo – Houses men
  • Kitsuregawa Rehabilitation Program Center (喜連川社会復帰促進センター)Sakura, Tochigi – Houses men
  • Mine Rehabilitation Program Center (美祢社会復帰促進センター)Mine, Yamaguchi – Houses men and women
  • Shimane Asahi Rehabilitation Program Center (島根あさひ社会復帰促進センター)Hamada, Shimane – Houses men

The inmates population tends to be large: 2,000 at Kizuregawa and Shimane Asahi; 1,000 at Harima and 500 at Miya. Under the PFI, prison facilities were built by the state but the operation and maintenance are made by private companies. Inmates at the private prisons are without advanced criminal inclinations.

edit

The logo of the Correction Bureau includes three "C"s. One stands for Challenge, one for Change, and one for Cooperate.[32]

References edit

  1. ^ Röhl, Wilhelm (2005). History Of Law In Japan Since 1868. Brill Publishers. p. 759. ISBN 978-9004131644.
  2. ^ Hardacre, Helen; Kern, Adam Lewis (1997). New Directions in the Study of Meiji Japan. Brill Publishers. p. 754. ISBN 978-9004107359.
  3. ^ "The Prison Law of Japan, and Regulations for the Application of the Prison Law". Charity Organisation Review. 28 (167): 335–340. 1910. JSTOR 43788753.
  4. ^ "Correctional Institutions in Japan" (PDF). Ministry of Justice. 1973. pp. 18–19.
  5. ^ Asakura, Takuya (November 27, 2002). "Education for some refugees is ray of hope". The Japan Times. Archived from the original on May 16, 2018.
  6. ^ Tsuru, Shingo (March 21, 2018). "Prison cell no bar to learning as inmate in his 80s proves". Asahi Shimbun. Archived from the original on May 16, 2018.
  7. ^ (PDF). Findings (188). Home Office. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 25, 2009.
  8. ^ . King's College London. Archived from the original on March 12, 2011.
  9. ^ Yamaguchi, Mari (9 December 2010). "Prisons trying to cope with swelling elderly population". The Japan Times. Retrieved 2013-09-23.
  10. ^ Coskrey, Jason (3 August 2009). "Rise in elderly shoplifters due to loneliness: police study". The Japan Times. Retrieved 2013-09-23.
  11. ^ Kyoto, University; Kokugakuin, University. "Prisons in Japan". Prison Insider. Retrieved 2019-04-24.
  12. ^ a b "Outline of Prison Work". Japan Ministry of Justice. 5 February 2009.
  13. ^ Human Rights Watch (1995). "Prison Conditions in Japan". Human Rights Watch Prison Project: 97–107.
  14. ^ "Prison labor feeling the crunch". The Japan Times. 5 February 2009. Retrieved 29 May 2020.
  15. ^ "British prisoners used as slave labour". The Independent. 25 May 1995.
  16. ^ "Japanese Prison Labor Practices: Joint Hearing Before the Subcommittees on International Security, International Organizations, and Human Rights and Asia and the Pacific of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, House of Representatives, One Hundred Third Congress, Second Session, June 10, 1994" (PDF). 10 June 1994.
  17. ^ "On a Mission to Turn Spotlight on His Jailers; He Claims Japan Mistreats Its Inmates". The New York Times. 10 June 1994.
  18. ^ "Document - Japan: Prisoners face cruel and humiliating punishment". Amnesty International. 1998-06-26. Retrieved 2013-09-23.
  19. ^ "Japan". U.S. Department of State.
  20. ^ Johnston, Eric (June 26, 2007). "Prison reforms seen as too little, and way too late". The Japan Times.
  21. ^ . Japanese Federation of Bar Associations. October 2006. Archived from the original on October 24, 2011.
  22. ^ "Uniformed and effectual Handling, for example court case ralated [sic] Japan". www.moj.go.jp. Retrieved February 15, 2021.
  23. ^ a b "Detention Centers and Prisons in Japan | ヒューライツ大阪". www.hurights.or.jp.
  24. ^ "'Prison Libraries' in Japan: The Current Situation of Access to Books and Reading in Correctional Institutions". Library Trends. 59 (3). 2011. Retrieved November 24, 2017.
  25. ^ "General Outline of Japanese Adult Corrections." Penal Institutions in Japan 2010-07-03 at the Wayback Machine. Ministry of Justice. 4 (4/21). Retrieved on May 30, 2010.
  26. ^ "Osaka Prison."(in Japanese) Ministry of Justice. Retrieved on May 30, 2010.
  27. ^ "入札公告(建設工事)." (English is at the end of the document) Ministry of Justice. Retrieved on May 30, 2010.
  28. ^ "'I want to get married': an interview with the Japan 'Twitter killer' sentenced to death". Mainichi Daily News. 17 December 2020.
  29. ^ "NPO法人 監獄人権センター". Center for Prisoner's Rights. Retrieved 2013-09-23.
  30. ^ Criminalization and prisoners in Japan: six contrary cohorts Elmer Hubert Johnson P244 SIU Press, 1997
  31. ^ "General Outline of Japanese Adult Corrections." Penal Institutions in Japan 2010-07-03 at the Wayback Machine. Ministry of Justice. 18 (18/21). Retrieved on May 30, 2010.
  32. ^ "矯正ロゴマーク." Correction Bureau. Retrieved on May 30, 2010.

External links edit

  • Correction Bureau - Ministry of Justice
  • Correction Bureau - Ministry of Justice (in Japanese)
  • Correctional Association Foundation (in Japanese)
  • Center for Prisoners' Rights (in Japanese)
  • Documentary: Japan from inside / Le Japon à double tour

penal, system, japan, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, decem. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Penal system of Japan news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2009 Learn how and when to remove this message The penal system of Japan including prisons is part of the criminal justice system of Japan It is intended to resocialize reform rehabilitate and punish offenders The penal system is operated by the Correction Bureau of the Ministry of Justice Tokyo Detention House in Katsushika Tokyo Contents 1 Procedure 2 Education 3 Administration 4 Prison population 5 Juvenile offenders 6 Aftercare treatment 7 Foreign inmates 8 Use of volunteers 9 Convict labour 10 Claims of inmate rights abuses 11 Penal institutions 11 1 Prisons 11 1 1 Sapporo Correctional Precinct 11 1 2 Sendai Correctional Precinct 11 1 3 Tokyo Correctional Precinct 11 1 4 Nagoya Correctional Precinct 11 1 5 Osaka Correctional Precinct 11 1 6 Hiroshima Correctional Precinct 11 1 7 Takamatsu Correctional Precinct 11 1 8 Fukuoka Correctional Precinct 11 2 Detention houses 11 3 Medical facilities 11 4 Private Finance Initiative 12 Logo 13 References 14 External linksProcedure editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2010 Learn how and when to remove this message On confinement prisoners are first classified according to gender nationality type of penalty length of sentence degree of criminality and state of physical and mental health They are then placed in special programs designed to treat their individual needs Education editPrison education in Japan can be traced back to at least 1871 when practical ethics lectures were introduced into a prison in Tokyo 1 Reading and writing classes began being implemented into the prison system on a larger scale by 1881 By the late 1880s it was believed that ethics classes were the most important form of education for prisoners and by the 1890s education was considered one of the most important issues of the prison system Conferences mostly attended by prison staff were held in 1889 and 1892 to discuss ways to improve education within the prison system There was no unanimous agreement on the best way to implement moral education for prisoners and different institutions began running their own individual programs 2 In 1910 prison law in Japan ordered education be given to all juvenile inmates and to any adult inmate deemed to have a need Regulations stipulated two to four hours per day be set aside for education 3 In 1952 correspondence courses were introduced into all prisons and in 1955 a high school was established at Matsumoto juvenile prison for juvenile inmates who had not completed their compulsory education 4 As of 2018 male prisoners nationwide can still be transferred on request to the school There were six graduates in 2002 and three in 2018 5 6 Administration editThe Correctional Bureau of the Ministry of Justice administers the adult prison system as well as the juvenile correctional system and three women s guidance homes to rehabilitate sex workers The ministry s Rehabilitation Bureau operates the probation and parole systems Prison personnel are trained at an institute in Tokyo and in branch training institutes in each of the eight regional correctional headquarters under the Correctional Bureau Professional probation officers study at the Legal Training and Research Institute of the Ministry The prison guards in Japan do not carry firearms but can activate an alarm where specialized armed guards will come There can be as low as one prison guard supervising 40 inmates while they are working Prison population editIn 1990 Japan s prison population stood at somewhat less than 47 000 nearly 7 000 were in short term detention centers and the remaining 40 000 were in prisons Approximately 46 were repeat offenders Japanese recidivism was attributed mainly to the discretionary powers of police prosecutors and courts and to the tendency to seek alternative sentences for first offenders By 2001 the overall prison population rose to 61 242 7 or 48 prisoners per 100 000 By the end of 2009 the prison population had yet again risen to 75 250 or 59 prisoners per 100 000 8 One reason for the rise is a large increase in the number of elderly being convicted of crimes with loneliness being cited as a major factor 9 10 Juvenile offenders editAlthough a few juvenile offenders are handled under the general penal system most are treated in separate juvenile training schools More lenient than the penal institutions these facilities provide correctional education and regular schooling for delinquents under the age of twenty More adults are in prison than child delinquents mainly because of the low crime rate In Japan juvenile prisoners are defined as people less than 20 years of age All juvenile cases are first sent to a family court where the judge may decide that the juvenile be tried by the ordinary court as an adult Juveniles not tried by an ordinary court are detained in juvenile training schools typical juvenile correctional institutions these prisoners represented 2 872 at the end of 2014 The 52 Juvenile institutions are under the responsibility of the prison administration Minors under 18 years of age cannot be sentenced to the death penalty Juvenile prisoners make up 4 5 of the prison population 11 Aftercare treatment editAccording to the Ministry of Justice the government s responsibility for social order does not end with imprisoning an offender but also extends to aftercare treatment and to noninstitutional treatment to substitute for or supplement prison terms A large number of those given suspended sentences are released to the supervision of volunteer officers under the guidance of professional probation officers Adults are usually placed on probation for a fixed period and juveniles are placed on probation until they reach the age of twenty Foreign inmates editThe number of crimes committed by foreigners significantly decreased in recent years from 43 622 in 2005 to 15 276 in 2016 Most common offenses committed by foreigners were theft 60 of their Penal Code offenses immigration violations 66 of non Penal code offenses and drug offenses in 2016 The number of convicted foreign prisoners was 3 509 in 2016 Yet most of them were given suspended sentences and only 744 were imprisoned in the same year The largest group was thieves 122 people and the second largest was drug offenders 96 people Use of volunteers editVolunteers are also used in supervising parolees although professional probation officers generally supervise offenders considered to have a high risk of recidivism Volunteers hail from all walks of life and handle no more than five cases at one time They are responsible for overseeing the offenders conduct to prevent the occurrence of further offenses Volunteer probation officers also offer guidance and assistance to the ex convict in assuming a law abiding place in the community Although volunteers are sometimes criticized for being too old compared with their charges more than 70 percent are retired and are age fifty five or over and thus unable to understand the problems their charges faced most authorities believe that the volunteers are critically important in the nation s criminal justice system Convict labour editAssigned labour is considered a priority in Japan s correctional system By law if a prisoner refuses work or neglects their labour responsibility punishment is to be implemented Work hours consist of eight hours each day over the Monday Friday period and four hours on Saturdays although individual cases may extend or limit these procedures In most prisons inmates who perform paid work are paid for their activity 12 The money earned by inmates through prison labour in Japan is not owned by the inmate until they are released from incarceration Instead income is placed into a specialised bank account with only a small amount being available for prisoner use to purchase essential items from the prison store Permission may also be granted for inmates to use this saved amount toward fines lawsuit fees and alimony 13 Depending on an inmate s classification occupational training is also a feature of Japan s correctional system Intended to prepare prisoners for their release into society prison institutions may offer training in dry cleaning automobile repairs photo typography carpentry and leatherwork These opportunities are based on prisoner requests and may or may not be accepted by prison authorities 12 Prisoners in Japan are also able to undertake factory work e g assembling machinery fabricating parts for external manufacturers through contracted arrangements As opposed to outsourcing labour to China based factories manufacturers subcontract their factory work to prisons to save shipping and production costs 14 Former US Marine Rodrico Harp who was sentenced to seven years hard labor for his part in the infamous 1995 Okinawa rape incident served his sentence at Kurihama prison near Yokosuka and described fabricating car parts for Mazda and Nissan for a salary of less than 30 a month during his incarceration in an interview with Stars and Stripes after his release International criminal defense lawyer Michael Griffith is a well known critic of the practice saying They don t have to recruit these workers They don t have to insure them or give them sick pay or fulfil any of the obligations that they would in a regular factory They know that their workers can never complain or join a trade union or get headaches or take time off Why should these companies get the benefit of convict labour It is sheer naked exploitation and it is a disgrace in any country that calls itself a civilised democracy 15 In June 1994 Griffith made submissions to the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives along with his client Christopher Lavinger who previously served 16 months in Fuchu Prison for drug possession Lavinger described to the Committee his experiences of making an array of commercial products in the prison factory including electronic components for SEGA for a salary of less than twenty cents an hour 16 Thomas Klitgaard senior vice president and general counsel of SEGA USA later stated that one of 300 subcontractors retained by SEGA Japan had used prison labor to assemble nine pin connector plugs for some SEGA games but that the practice had subsequently been detected and stopped 17 Claims of inmate rights abuses editAmnesty International has cited Japan for abuse of inmates by guards for infractions of prison rules This abuse is in the form of beatings solitary confinement overcrowding or minor solitary confinement keiheikin which forces inmates to be interned in tiny cells kneeling or crossed legged and restrained with handcuffs for prolonged periods of time 18 In 2003 Justice Ministry formed a special team to investigate 1 566 prisoner deaths from 1993 to 2002 A preliminary report suggested that nearly one third of the cases involved suspicious circumstances However in June the Ministry announced that there was evidence of abuse only in the two Nagoya fatalities Regarding the other suspicious deaths the Ministry said that approximately 10 deaths could be attributed to poor medical care The authorities reported they had lost the documentation on nine deaths in Tokyo s Fuchu Prison The remaining deaths were determined to be not suspicious 19 In the wake of prison abuses the Law Concerning Penal Institutions and the Treatment of Sentenced Inmates came into effect on June 7 2007 to reform treatment on prisoners 20 21 22 such as the expansion of prisoners contacts with the outside world the establishment of independent committees to inspect prisons and the improvement of the complaints mechanisms 23 However the Japan Federation of Bar Associations JFBA expressed concerns in 2010 about revalidating unlimited solitary confinements along with newer types of handcuffs for such inmates not providing medical care for inmates under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Health Labour and Welfare and mental and physical effects of confinement for death row inmates 23 In the article Prison Libraries in Japan The Current Situation of Access to Books and Reading in Correctional Institutions Kenichi Nakane talks about another form of prisoner neglect abuse Nakane s article finds that there is a severe lack of reading materials available to people who are incarcerated in Japanese correctional facilities The author Kenichi Nakane uses the term Prison Library because there are no professionally run libraries inside of any of the correctional facilities Nakane finds that incarcerated persons can only get books newspapers and magazines by buying them and or getting them as gifts Nakane found that occasionally a limited number of reading materials are supplied but they are out dated and inadequate Nakane also finds the lack of reading material and availability of information in these incarceration facilities to be hindering some of the rights of the incarcerated individuals To further investigate this problem Kenichi Nakane traveled to twenty six prisons in America and seven prisons in the United Kingdom and found that the availability of books and information to incarcerated individuals in Japan was very limited compared to US and UK prisons 24 Penal institutions editJapanese penal institutions include prisons for sentenced adults juvenile detention centers for sentenced juveniles and detention houses for pre trial inmates 25 In Japan there are 62 prisons 7 juvenile prisons 52 juvenile classification homes 52 juvenile training schools 10 Detention Houses 8 regional parole boards and 50 probation offices Prisons edit Different types of prisoners are sent to different prisons For example the Fuchu Prison Tokyo and Yokohama Prison Kanagawa receive inmates that have advanced criminal inclination with sentences shorter than 10 years e g prisoners affiliated with crime organizations The Chiba Prison received inmates without advanced criminal inclination and who do not have sentences longer than 10 years e g murder without the possibility of repeating a crime again Ichihara Prison Chiba is specialized for traffic offenders e g repetitive offenders and those who killed others while driving Sapporo Correctional Precinct edit Sapporo Prison 札幌刑務所 Higashi ku Sapporo Sapporo Prison Sapporo Branch 札幌刑務所札幌刑務支所 Higashi ku Sapporo Asahikawa Prison 旭川刑務所 Asahikawa Hokkaidō Obihiro Prison 帯広刑務所 Obihiro Hokkaidō Obihiro Prison Kushiro Branch 帯広刑務所釧路刑務支所 Kushiro Hokkaidō Abashiri Prison 網走刑務所 Abashiri Hokkaidō with Abashiri Prison museum ja Tsukigata Prison 月形刑務所 Tsukigata Hokkaidō Hakodate Juvenile Prison 函館少年刑務所 Hakodate Hokkaidō Sendai Correctional Precinct edit Aomori Prison 青森刑務所 Aomori Aomori Miyagi Prison 宮城刑務所 Wakabayashi ku Sendai Akita Prison 秋田刑務所 Akita City Yamagata Prison 山形刑務所 Yamagata Yamagata Fukushima Prison 福島刑務所 Fukushima Fukushima Fukushima Prison Fukushima Branch 福島刑務所福島刑務支所 Morioka Iwate Morioka Juvenile Prison 盛岡少年刑務所 Morioka Iwate Tokyo Correctional Precinct edit Mito Prison 水戸刑務所 Hitachinaka Ibaraki Tochigi Prison 栃木刑務所 Tochigi Tochigi Kurobane Prison 黒羽刑務所 Ōtawara Tochigi Maebashi Prison 前橋刑務所 Maebashi Gunma Chiba Prison 千葉刑務所 Wakaba ku Chiba Ichihara Prison 市原刑務所 Ichihara Chiba Fuchu Prison 府中刑務所 Fuchu Tokyo Yokohama Prison 横浜刑務所 Kōnan ku Yokohama Yokohama Prison Yokosuka Branch 横浜刑務所横須賀刑務支所 Yokosuka Kanagawa Niigata Prison 新潟刑務所 Kōnan ku Niigata Kofu Prison 甲府刑務所 Kōfu Yamanashi Nagano Prison 長野刑務所 Suzaka Nagano Shizuoka Prison 静岡刑務所 Aoi ku Shizuoka Kawagoe Juvenile Prison 川越少年刑務所 Kawagoe Saitama Matsumoto Juvenile Prison 松本少年刑務所 Matsumoto Nagano Nagoya Correctional Precinct edit Toyama Prison 富山刑務所 Toyama City Kanazawa Prison 金沢刑務所 Kanazawa Ishikawa Fukui Prison 福井刑務所 Fukui Fukui Gifu Prison 岐阜刑務所 Gifu Gifu Kasamatsu Prison 笠松刑務所 Kasamatsu Gifu Nagoya Prison 名古屋刑務所 Miyoshi Aichi Nagoya Prison Toyohashi Branch 名古屋刑務所豊橋刑務支所 Toyohashi Aichi Mie Prison 三重刑務所 Tsu Mie Osaka Correctional Precinct edit Shiga Prison 滋賀刑務所 Ōtsu Shiga Kyoto Prison 京都刑務所 Yamashina ku Kyoto Osaka Prison 大阪刑務所 Sakai ku Sakai 26 Kobe Prison 神戸刑務所 Akashi Hyōgo Kakogawa Prison 加古川刑務所 Kakogawa Hyōgo Wakayama Prison 和歌山刑務所 Wakayama Wakayama Himeji Prison 姫路少年刑務所 Himeji Hyōgo Nara Juvenile Prison 奈良少年刑務所 Nara Nara Hiroshima Correctional Precinct edit Tottori Prison 鳥取刑務所 Tottori Tottori Matsue Prison 松江刑務所 Matsue Shimane Okayama Prison 岡山刑務所 Kita ku Okayama Hiroshima Prison 広島刑務所 Naka ku Hiroshima 27 Hiroshima Prison Onomichi Branch 広島刑務所尾道刑務支所 Onomichi Hiroshima Yamaguchi Prison 山口刑務所 Yamaguchi Yamaguchi Iwakuni Prison 岩国刑務所 Iwakuni Yamaguchi Takamatsu Correctional Precinct edit Tokushima Prison 徳島刑務所 Tokushima Tokushima Takamatsu Prison 高松刑務所 Takamatsu Kagawa Matsuyama Prison 松山刑務所 Tōon Ehime Matsuyama Prison Saijo Branch 松山刑務所西条刑務支所 Saijō Ehime Kochi Prison 高知刑務所 Kōchi Kōchi Fukuoka Correctional Precinct edit Fukuoka Prison 福岡刑務所 Umi Fukuoka Fumoto Prison 麓刑務所 Tosu Saga Sasebo Prison 佐世保刑務所 Sasebo Nagasaki Nagasaki Prison 長崎刑務所 Isahaya Nagasaki Kumamoto Prison 熊本刑務所 Kumamoto Kumamoto Oita Prison 大分刑務所 Ōita Ōita Miyazaki Prison 宮崎刑務所 Miyazaki Miyazaki Kagoshima Prison 鹿児島刑務所 Yusui Kagoshima Okinawa Prison 沖縄刑務所 Nanjō Okinawa Okinawa Prison Yaeyama Branch 沖縄刑務所八重山刑務支所 Ishigaki Okinawa Saga Juvenile Prison 佐賀少年刑務所 Saga Saga Detention houses edit Tokyo Detention House Tachikawa Detention House 28 Nagoya Detention House Kyoto Detention House Osaka Detention House Kobe Detention House Hiroshima Detention House Fukuoka Detention House Sendai Detention House Sapporo Detention House Medical facilities edit Hachiojo medical prison 八王子医療刑務所 Hachiōji Tokyo Kitakyushu medical prison 北九州医療刑務所 Kokuraminami ku Kitakyushu mental illness An inmate died in 1992 at Jono after an assault by a prison officer 29 Kikuchi medical branch prison leprosy Okazaki medical prison 岡崎医療刑務所 Okazaki Aichi mental illness Osaka medical branch prison 30 大阪医療刑務所 Sakai ku Sakai Private Finance Initiative edit Private Finance Initiative PFI prisons are maintained with private management PFI prisons which are for sentenced inmates with low criminal tendencies include 31 Harima Rehabilitation Program Center 播磨社会復帰促進センター Kakogawa Hyogo Houses men Kitsuregawa Rehabilitation Program Center 喜連川社会復帰促進センター Sakura Tochigi Houses men Mine Rehabilitation Program Center 美祢社会復帰促進センター Mine Yamaguchi Houses men and women Shimane Asahi Rehabilitation Program Center 島根あさひ社会復帰促進センター Hamada Shimane Houses men The inmates population tends to be large 2 000 at Kizuregawa and Shimane Asahi 1 000 at Harima and 500 at Miya Under the PFI prison facilities were built by the state but the operation and maintenance are made by private companies Inmates at the private prisons are without advanced criminal inclinations Logo editThe logo of the Correction Bureau includes three C s One stands for Challenge one for Change and one for Cooperate 32 References edit Rohl Wilhelm 2005 History Of Law In Japan Since 1868 Brill Publishers p 759 ISBN 978 9004131644 Hardacre Helen Kern Adam Lewis 1997 New Directions in the Study of Meiji Japan Brill Publishers p 754 ISBN 978 9004107359 The Prison Law of Japan and Regulations for the Application of the Prison Law Charity Organisation Review 28 167 335 340 1910 JSTOR 43788753 Correctional Institutions in Japan PDF Ministry of Justice 1973 pp 18 19 Asakura Takuya November 27 2002 Education for some refugees is ray of hope The Japan Times Archived from the original on May 16 2018 Tsuru Shingo March 21 2018 Prison cell no bar to learning as inmate in his 80s proves Asahi Shimbun Archived from the original on May 16 2018 World Prison Population List fourth edition PDF Findings 188 Home Office Archived from the original PDF on March 25 2009 Prison Brief for Japan King s College London Archived from the original on March 12 2011 Yamaguchi Mari 9 December 2010 Prisons trying to cope with swelling elderly population The Japan Times Retrieved 2013 09 23 Coskrey Jason 3 August 2009 Rise in elderly shoplifters due to loneliness police study The Japan Times Retrieved 2013 09 23 Kyoto University Kokugakuin University Prisons in Japan Prison Insider Retrieved 2019 04 24 a b Outline of Prison Work Japan Ministry of Justice 5 February 2009 Human Rights Watch 1995 Prison Conditions in Japan Human Rights Watch Prison Project 97 107 Prison labor feeling the crunch The Japan Times 5 February 2009 Retrieved 29 May 2020 British prisoners used as slave labour The Independent 25 May 1995 Japanese Prison Labor Practices Joint Hearing Before the Subcommittees on International Security International Organizations and Human Rights and Asia and the Pacific of the Committee on Foreign Affairs House of Representatives One Hundred Third Congress Second Session June 10 1994 PDF 10 June 1994 On a Mission to Turn Spotlight on His Jailers He Claims Japan Mistreats Its Inmates The New York Times 10 June 1994 Document Japan Prisoners face cruel and humiliating punishment Amnesty International 1998 06 26 Retrieved 2013 09 23 Japan U S Department of State Johnston Eric June 26 2007 Prison reforms seen as too little and way too late The Japan Times If You are Arrested Information for Prison Inmates Japanese Federation of Bar Associations October 2006 Archived from the original on October 24 2011 Uniformed and effectual Handling for example court case ralated sic Japan www moj go jp Retrieved February 15 2021 a b Detention Centers and Prisons in Japan ヒューライツ大阪 www hurights or jp Prison Libraries in Japan The Current Situation of Access to Books and Reading in Correctional Institutions Library Trends 59 3 2011 Retrieved November 24 2017 General Outline of Japanese Adult Corrections Penal Institutions in Japan Archived 2010 07 03 at the Wayback Machine Ministry of Justice 4 4 21 Retrieved on May 30 2010 Osaka Prison in Japanese Ministry of Justice Retrieved on May 30 2010 入札公告 建設工事 English is at the end of the document Ministry of Justice Retrieved on May 30 2010 I want to get married an interview with the Japan Twitter killer sentenced to death Mainichi Daily News 17 December 2020 NPO法人 監獄人権センター Center for Prisoner s Rights Retrieved 2013 09 23 Criminalization and prisoners in Japan six contrary cohorts Elmer Hubert Johnson P244 SIU Press 1997 General Outline of Japanese Adult Corrections Penal Institutions in Japan Archived 2010 07 03 at the Wayback Machine Ministry of Justice 18 18 21 Retrieved on May 30 2010 矯正ロゴマーク Correction Bureau Retrieved on May 30 2010 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Country Studies Federal Research Division JapanExternal links edit nbsp Japan portal nbsp Law portal Correction Bureau Ministry of Justice Correction Bureau Ministry of Justice in Japanese Correctional Association Foundation in Japanese Center for Prisoners Rights in Japanese Documentary Japan from inside Le Japon a double tour Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Penal system of Japan amp oldid 1211456231, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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