This week’s report from HM Inspectorate of Prisons is a damning indictment of a prison system on its knees. This is a system that is failing in its most basic duty, to keep people safe from harm. Efforts to rehabilitate and prepare prison-leavers for release have been struggling under the weight of decades of under-investment, overcrowding and poor long-term planning. This is a system at breaking point.
The 2023 – 2024 HMIP Annual Report offers an annual overview of the prison system through a lens of unannounced inspections, its findings draw on 79 inspection reports, including reports on 39 adult prisons.
For Nacro, there are four major take-aways from the report:
1. People are not being kept safe in prison
The report presents a system failing in its most basic form, to keep prisoners safe. Suicide and self-harm had increased considerably in some men’s prisons. And in some cases, self-harm had doubled in the prisons inspected. In 2023, self-inflicted deaths in adult men’s prisons rose by 27% to a total of 90. Drugs, debt, a lack of meaningful activity and inconsistent support from staff, were all cited as reasons for the increase in self-harm in prison.
The report also noted an increase in violence in prisons, with one of the major drivers being drug use. It is common to find through random drug testing more than 40% of inmates testing positive for drugs. This creates behavioural problems and gets in the way of efforts to rehabilitate people and plan for the future.