Impact of Prison Reforms on Rehabilitation of Offenders in Kenya: the Case of Naivasha Maximum Security Prison
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Date
2013Author
Musyoka, Annastacia N
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
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ABSTRACT
The study aims at establishing the impact of prison reforms on rehabilitation of
offenders. Specifically, the study seeks to establish the chief drivers of prison reforms
in Kenya and how opening up prisons to ‘outside contact’ has contributed to behavior
change among inmates. Prisons are part of wider public sector and there has been
efforts world over to reform public institutions with a view to improving service
delivery and management practices. In this regards, it is expected that all reform
agenda meet the expectations or objectives set as this is where success is pegged on. It
is also expected that prisoner’s behavior would change with the initiation of reforms.
Specifically this implies that recidivism will decline. The study site was Naivasha
Maximum Security prison. The respondents interviewed for the study were in three
categories. They included inmates who have been in prison before 2001 and after and
have since then reoffended, key informants and ex-offenders. A total of 40
respondents were interviewed for the study. The method of sampling used was
purposive. The methods used are both structured and semi structured interviews. The
study employed both qualitative and quantitative approach. Quantitative approach was
used because during data manipulation, variables of nominal scale were statistically
applied. Numerical values were assigned to such data for coding purposes. Variables
of age and level of education were used versus the likelihood of re-offending to
establish the significant relationship through Chi-Square test. The findings of the
study have shown that the opening of prisons is facilitating behavior change though
issues of stigma, unemployment and ineffective police force have been fronted as
factors contributing to reoffending. The study concludes that prison reforms are about
changing the prison institution and its practices. It is expected that prisoners’ behavior
would change after reforms have been undertaken. This implies that after a prisoner
has completed serving his/her imprisonment term, he or she becomes a law-abinding
citizen through non-involvement in crime which is a true measure for rehabilitation.
Citation
A Project Paper Submitted to the Institute for Development Studies in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Award of Degree of Master of Arts in Development Studies, University of NairobiPublisher
University of Nairobi Arts in Development Studies,