Buch, Englisch, Band 402, 271 Seiten, Format (B × H): 158 mm x 242 mm
Reihe: E.M. Meijers Instituut voor Rechtswetenschappelijk Onderzoek
A case study of the prison system’s legal mandate, and the rehabilitation programmes in Pul-e-charkhi prison
Buch, Englisch, Band 402, 271 Seiten, Format (B × H): 158 mm x 242 mm
Reihe: E.M. Meijers Instituut voor Rechtswetenschappelijk Onderzoek
ISBN: 978-90-473-0156-1
Verlag: eleven
Historically, various Afghan regimes used prisons to lock up adversaries. Each regime change, saw prisoners become wardens and vice versa and prison management was dominated by the military. Pul-e-charkhi, a Russian era and high security prison near Kabul, with app. 13000 prisoners – half of them being Taliban fighters – was a case study. The author conducted numerous interviews with inmates about their conditions, hoping to help improve the prison’s rehabilitation efforts. Yet, apart from some education and industrial programmes, rehabilitation activities remained very limited. At present, the Taliban are in control again. This study offers little hope for short-term improvements.
This is a volume in the series of the Meijers Research Institute and Graduate School of the Leiden Law School of Leiden University. This study is part of the Law School’s research programme ‘Criminal Justice: Legitimacy, Accountability and Effectivity’ and research programme ‘Effective Protection of Fundamental Rights in a pluralist world’.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
1 The research; 2 State-building, lawmaking, and criminal justice before and after the 2001 international intervention; 3 The institutional context for post-2001 lawmaking and criminal justice reform; 4 A case study of criminal justice laws reformed due to the post-2001 overhaul; 5 The legal mandate for prisons and the challenge of rehabilitation; 6 Pul-e-charkhi: the context; 7 Pul-e-charkhi: the institution; 8 Pul-e-charkhi: the prisoners and the failing rehabilitation programmes; 9 Main conclusions; 10 Epilogue – post-2020 changes, the Taliban takeover, and changes in the prison system; Bibliography; About the Author