Institutional Corrections
Institutional Corrections
Institutional Corrections
Based
Corrections
Prepared by:
Maria Jellica P. Bartolano
CHAPTER I
A Global View on Prison
Administration
Every prison in the world is a place of
repentance, just like the National Penitentiary of
the Philippines now known as the New Bilibid
Prison. As per Dr. Armando F. Grata, in his study
Transcending Humanity in the New Bilibid Prison
Spirituality; A Phenomenological Study, he stated
that “a penitentiary is a place where, those who
violated the social prescriptions of conduct of
society are made to atone for their acts,
commonly described from the institutional point of
view as crime. This is a place where supposedly
an offender is seen suffering from physical
hardships and isolation.
Accordingly, from the perspective of the prison
institution and free society, which requires and
entails a whole set of values, a whole way of
looking at people, at human relationships, at the
relationship of the individual to the state, about
which there has to be some decent level of
consensus (Branden, 1996), prison may be viewed
in two ways. First the Auburn model, which is
about punishing criminals, otherwise known as the
Retributive Justice. On the other side is the more
humane way of the Eastern State model, which is
“about having people in a controlled setting and
using the space in a humane way”, otherwise
known as the Restorative Approach.
The establishment of a prison at Auburn, New York,
USA in 1816 led to a new prison model and regime,
designed to keep convicts separate and unable to
communicate with each other even as they were forced
to labor as penal slaves. “Industry, obedience, and
silence” were the guiding principles of the new system.
This model provides a “tiny individual cells and
workshops as well a rigid system of enforced silence
and harsh punishments”. Accordingly, “movement to
and from the workshops was performed in a regimented
manner, known as the lockstep, which called for
prisoners to watch in a military style human chain.
Lockstep
While Eastern State Model believes that
crime is the result of environment and that
solitude will make the criminal regretful and
penitent, hence penitentiary. This would not only
punish, but move the criminal toward spiritual
reflection and change. In its early forms, inmates
were hooded whenever they were outside of their
cells to prevent distraction, knowledge of the
building and all interaction. This correctional
theory would be known as the Pennsylvania
System.
Eastern State Model
The emerging paradigm of correction, which is to
restore the offender to his obligation as a “law-abiding”
citizen has gained popularity both in theory and practice.
Prisons of today are operated. Manned and built with the
purpose of following the Theory of Restorative Justice.
Restorative Justice is a way of thinking about what is
best for the many connections among crime victims,
their offenders and the criminal justice process.
Restorative Justice advocates suggest that conventional
assumptions about these connections may be wrong:
that victims should be at the center rather than excluded
from the process, that victims and offenders are not
natural enemies,
that victims are not primarily retributive in their
view of justice, that prison is not necessarily the
best way to prevent repeat crime. Restorative
Justice, at least in principle, seeks ways for
victims and offenders to cooperate’ in preventing
future crime and repairing past harms.
Within the complex are the three (3) security camps are:
(a) The Maximum Security Compound
This compound houses
convicts whose sentences
are 20 years and above, life
termer or those under the
capital punishment including
the death row, those with
pending cases, those under
disciplinary punishment,
those whose cases are on
appeal, those under
detention and those that do
not fall under medium and
minimum status.
(b) The Minimum Security Camp
CAMP BUKANG LIWAYWAY
The name implying the
coming release of prisoners
destined here. This is an
open camp with less
restrictions and
regimentation. This is for
prisoners who are 65 years
old and above medically
certified invalids and for
those prisoners who have six
months or less to serve
before they are released from
prison.
The Medium Security Camp
CAMP SAMPAGUITA
Which houses medium
security prisoners, whose
prison term are below 20
year (computed from the
minimum sentence per
classification interpretation)
and those classified for
colony assignment. The
Youth Rehabilitation
Center for juvenile
offenders is also situated
here.
And the third facility is the Reception and
Diagnostic Center presently known as The Inmate
Reception and Education Center. This is a prison
facility within the medium Security compound of the new
Bilibid Prison. It receives all newly committed national
male prisoners coming and it is the entry point of all
incoming prisoners who will be subjected to
classification and distribution the operating institutions.
Concurrently it has been charged with the responsibility
of providing education and training of inmates at the
medium security compound of NBP.
(2) The Davao Penal Colony
The Davao Penal
Colony is located in Tagum,
Davao del Norte. A prison
Security Compound for
medium security prisoners. It
was established at almost
the same time and under the
same authority that the New
Bilibid Prison was
established in January 21,
1932 by virtue of Act no.
3732
and Proclamation No. 41, series of October 7, 1931 as
per recommendation of Governor Dwight Davis. Retired
General Paulino Santos, the incumbent Prisons Director
at the time led the first contingent of prisoners that
opened the colony that covers an area of about 18,000
hectares.
(3) The Sablayan Penal Colony and Farm
On September 27,
1954, the President of the
Philippines issued
Proclamation No. 72
allocating 16,000 hectares
of land in Sablayan,
Occidental Mindoro for the
setting up of another penal
colony. The Sablayan
Penal Colony and Farm
was established
to meet the increasing population of prisoners that is
already causing serious congestion. This Penal Farm is
intended for agro-industrial activities. Within its area are
four 940 sub-colonies: