Boot camp (correctional)
Boot camps are part of the correctional and penal system of some countries. Modeled after military recruit training camps, these programs are based on shock incarceration grounded on military techniques. The aggressive training used has resulted in deaths in a variety of circumstances. Boot camps are also criticized around the world for their lack of behavioral change and for the way extreme force can traumatize children and teenagers.[1]
Background[]
The term "boot" originates from US Navy and Marine recruits in the Spanish–American War (1898) who wore leggings called boots. These recruits were trained in "boot" camps.[2][3]
Military-style training was used in the eighteenth century to rehabilitate civilian prisoners in the United States and for military prisoners during World War 2.[4][3]
Use around the world[]
Australia[]
In Australia the Premier of the state of Queensland Campbell Newman announced that bootcamps for convicted young people will open in Townsville and Rockhampton by September 2013, along with two other camps.[5] These bootcamps closed in 2015.[6]
Canada[]
This section does not cite any sources. (September 2019) |
In Canada, participation in boot camp programs is voluntary, so as to avoid any challenges under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms under which treatment at boot camps could be seen as an infringement on a youth's right to not be subject to cruel and unusual punishment and to ensure security of person. Canada started a boot camp project for non-violent juveniles with differences from the American models. The first one was opened in 1997 in Ontario. Unlike in the US system it is not possible to trade or shorten a jail sentence with a significantly shorter boot camp program.
Canadian boot camps do not have the time frame of 90 to 180 days and they are restricted to juveniles under 18, and are not yet open to female offenders. The judges do not directly possess the authority to send a youth to a boot camp. They may impose a sentence of secure or open custody. The latter is defined as, "a community residential center, group home, child care institution or forest or wilderness camp..." Once an open custody sentence is granted, a correctional official decides whether a sentence is served in a boot camp program. But the ultimate decision rests with the young person and the decision is made purely on the merits of the program because the time served remains the same.
The Canadian system is too new to show any comparable results but research has been done among US boot camps with different emphases, e.g. more on drug treatment or education than solely on military drill. According to the findings treatment has a slightly positive impact on the reduction of recidivism over strict discipline.
New Zealand[]
New Zealand set up its first boot camps in 1971 but they were abandoned in 1981. The boot camps were regarded as a failure with a 71% rate of re-offending among corrective trainees.[7] Prior to being elected into Government in 2008 the National Party released a policy of using boot camps for those with drug problems.[8] The Fifth National Government introduced military-style activity camps (MACs) run by the New Zealand Defence Force for forty of the most serious recidivist young offenders which involved marching exercises, mentoring, drug and alcohol treatment programs, education, and an assisted move back into the community. The Government also launched a nine-week camp for the most serious, recidivist offenders in Christchurch in 2010 and a court-supervised programme providing up to ten days of adventure camp activities. While the-then Deputy Prime Minister Paula Bennett claimed the programmes had succeeded in lowering offending among that group, this was disputed by Prime Minister John Key's chief science adviser Sir Peter Gluckman in a 2011 report. The New Zealand Families Commission concluded that military camps and other measures such as curfews with electronic monitoring could not reduce re-offending on their own and that the most successful rehabilitation programmes involved the offenders' families.[9][10]
On 13 August 2017, Prime Minister Bill English promised to establish a boot camp known as the "Junior Training Academy" for youth offenders at the Waiouru Military Camp during the 2017 election campaign. English clarified that the camp would be for small group of around 150 young offenders who had committed serious offenses including serious assault, sexual assaults, aggravated robbery and murder.[11] In response, youth Justice advocacy group JustSpeak director Katie Bruce criticized the proposed boot camp policy and argued that it would do little to curb re-offending among young offenders.[12] National's proposed policy was criticized by the radio host Mark Sainsbury, The Opportunities Party leader Gareth Morgan, the New Zealand First leader Winston Peters, and the University of Canterbury psychologist and author Jarrod Gilbert, who contended that the policy was aimed at enticing voters rather than helping youth offenders and that previous boot camp programmes had failed.[13][14] The boot camp policy was also criticized by both National's support partner, the Māori Party, and the opposition Green Party for doing little to address youth offending within the Māori and the Pasifika communities.[15] David Seymour, the leader of National's support partner the ACT Party, criticized the boot camp policy as a sign of the Government's failure to tackle "broken families" and youth crime.[16]
United States[]
The first boot camps appeared in the states of Georgia and Oklahoma in 1983.[17][18] Boot camps are intended to be less restrictive than prison but harsher than probation.
In most U.S. states participation in boot camp programs is offered to young first-time offenders in place of a prison term or probation; in some states[where?] a youth can also be sentenced to participate in such a program. The time served can range from 90 to 180 days, which can make up for prison sentences of up to 10 years.[19] Federal shock incarceration programs are authorized under 18 U.S.C. § 4046, although the placement requires consent of the prisoner.
In 1995, the U.S. federal government and about two-thirds of the 50 states were operating boot camp programs. Presently, there are no statistics as to how many boot camps there are in the U.S. In 2000, there were 51 boot camps still open.[20] In 2010 80% of participants were ethnic minorities.[21]
There are many types of boot camps.[22] Some boot camps are more therapeutic. Boot camps such as West Ridge Academy[23] in West Jordan, Utah offer a wide range of activities, academics, and boarding school treatment programs to give students a well-rounded education.
State run boot camps were banned in Florida on June 1, 2006 through legislation signed by Florida Governor Jeb Bush after 14-year-old Martin Lee Anderson died while in a boot camp. Anderson died as drill instructors beat him and encouraged him to continue physical exercise after he had collapsed. While Anderson was unconscious, guards placed ammonia tablets near his nose in an attempt to revive him, and he suffocated. Anderson attended Bay County Boot Camp in Panama City, Florida.[24] The Victory Forge Military Academy in Florida has come under intense scrutiny of its methods, which border on physical abuse. The camp's defense is that the parents had signed a contract authorizing the use of physical force against their children.
Evaluation[]
Studies in the United States suggest that boot camps with a strong therapeutic component (such as education, drug treatment and counselling) have a positive effect on participants, while those that have no counselling and consist only of physical activity have a significant negative effect.[25][26] A key criticism is that the emphasis on authority can only result in frustration, resentment, anger, short temper, a low self-esteem and aggression rather than respect. Some boot camps have been the subject of abuse scandals. According to The New York Times there were 31 known deaths of youths in U.S. boot camps since between 1980 and 2009, a rate of approximately one death each year.[1]
Alternatives[]
Boot camps claim to remove children "from environments filled with negative influences and triggering events that produce self-defeating, reckless or self-destructive behavior". Other types of programs (see outdoor education, adventure therapy, and wilderness therapy) use this method while avoiding all or some of the controversial methods of boot camps, and they claim lower recidivism.
See also[]
- Behavior modification facility
- Fitness boot camp
- Juvenile court
- Rock and a Hard Place, an HBO documentary film about youth boot camps in the U.S.
- Brat Camp
- Borstal
References[]
- ^ a b Janofsky, Michael (2001-07-15). "States Pressed As 3 Boys Die At Boot Camps". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-06-09.
- ^ "World Wide Words: Boot camp". World Wide Words. Retrieved 2019-04-02.
- ^ a b "History of Boot Camps". Boot Camp Military Fitness Institute. November 2012. Retrieved May 27, 2018.
- ^ Smith, Beverly A. (1988). "Military Training at New York's Elmira Reformatory, 1888-1920". Federal Probation. 52: 33–40. Retrieved 2018-10-07.
- ^ "Newman announces boot camps for young offenders". Brisbane Times. 24 March 2013. Retrieved 27 March 2013.
- ^ "Boot camps to close across Queensland". 20 August 2015.
- ^ "Boot Camps no more than "Correctional Quackery" - Rethinking Crime and Punishment press release". Scoop. 17 February 2009. Retrieved 20 July 2011.
- ^ "Boot camps for teen crims in Nats' plan". The Dominion Post. 29 January 2008. Retrieved 21 September 2011.
- ^ "Boot camps tried and rejected - youth advocates". Radio New Zealand. 14 August 2017. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
- ^ Maxwell, Gabrielle. "Youth offenders - Programmes for young offenders". Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
- ^ Kirk, Stacey (13 August 2017). "Special bootcamp for youth offenders at Waiouru army camp, under National". Stuff.co.nz. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
- ^ "5:22 am today Boot camps tried and rejected - youth advocates". Radio New Zealand. 13 August 2017. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
- ^ Sainsbury, Mark (14 August 2017). "Mark Sainsbury: National's bootcamp policy is for voters, not offenders". Newshub. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
- ^ Satherley, Dan (13 August 2017). "Boot camps don't work - Gareth Morgan, crime expert". Newshub. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
- ^ Jones, Nicholas (14 August 2017). "Maori Party: National's boot camp plan an 'attack on Maori and Pasifika children'". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
- ^ Young, Audrey (14 August 2017). "Act's David Seymour calls out National's law and order policy". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
- ^ "Correctional Boot Camps: A Tough Intermediate Sanction" (PDF). U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, National Institute of Justice. February 1996. Retrieved 2010-10-07.
- ^ "Correctional Boot Camps: Lessons From a Decade of Research" (PDF). U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, National Institute of Justice. June 2003. Retrieved 2010-10-07.
- ^ "Troubled Teen Boot Camps - Problem with Teens, Troubled teens, help for troubled teens". problemwithteens.com. Archived from the original on 2014-03-29.
- ^ http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/197018.pdf
- ^ Riphagen, R. C. (2010) 'Effectiveness of Male Juvenile Boot Camps in the United States: A Critical Review of the Literature', Doctoral Dissertation, Azusa Pacific University.
- ^ "Collegebound Network". collegebound.net.
- ^ Windmeyer, Shane. "Boarding School Spotlight: West Ridge Academy". Collegebound.net. Archived from the original on 2012-02-18. Retrieved 2013-02-16.
- ^ "Boot Camps Abolished in Florida". WJHG.
- ^ Wilson, D.B.; MacKenzie, D.L.; Mitchell, F.N. (2003). "Effects of correctional boot camps on offending". Campbell Systematic Reviews. 1 (1): 1–45. doi:10.4073/csr.2005.6. S2CID 37134142.
- ^ Meade, B.; Steiner, B. (2010). "The total effects of boot camps that house juveniles: A systematic review of the evidence". Journal of Criminal Justice. 38 (5): 841–853. doi:10.1016/j.jcrimjus.2010.06.007.
Further reading[]
- Begin, P. Boot Camps: Issues for Consideration. (Ottawa: Library of Parliament, September 1996).
- "BHIP: Studies Find Boot Camps Have High Rearrest Rates.", February 18, 1998
- Cowles et al. "Boot Camp" Drug Treatment and Aftercare Intervention: An Evaluation Review. (Washington: National Institute of Justice, July 1995).
- Jones, P. Young Offenders and the Law. (North York: Captus Press, 1994).
- Mackenzie et al. "Boot Camp Prisons and Recidivism in Eight States." Canadian Journal of Criminology (1995), Vol. 3, No. 3: 327-355.
- McNaught, A. Boot Camps. (Toronto: Legislative Research Service, December 1995).
- Boot Camps: Issues for Canada (PDF). John Howard Society of Alberta. 1996. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2013-02-16.
- Rhue, Morton (Todd Strasser) (2010). Boot-Camp. Ravensburger Buchverl. ISBN 9783473582556.
External links[]
- Boot camps at Project NoSpank
- Punishments
- Penology
- Penal system in the United States
- Penal system in Canada
- Youth detention centers