Prisons, climate and a just transition discussion paper

Our reliance on imprisonment as a response to crime is harmful, ineffective, costly and discriminatory. It is also increasingly untenable in a world of worsening climate change.

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Background

Australia, like many other countries, is seeing the damaging impact of climate change on communities and ecosystems. In the face of these worsening climate change impacts, marginalised people and communities are most at risk, including people in prison.

The physical and mental health of people in prison, who disproportionately come from marginalised and disadvantaged backgrounds, is well below the general population. People in prison experience higher rates of mental ill-health, chronic physical health conditions such as asthma or arthritis, acquired brain injury, and high-risk drug and alcohol use. The prevalence of such underlying conditions amplify the health risks during emergencies such as pandemics or bushfire.

The impacts of climate change on people in prison, such as extreme temperatures and increasingly severe and frequent disasters, may be exacerbated in Australia by rising prison populations, prison size and location, overcrowding, punitive practices such as solitary confinement, ageing or otherwise unsuitable infrastructure, and ineffective standards, monitoring and accountability mechanisms.

In this context, issues including extreme temperatures in prisons, the location, size, security rating and infrastructure of prisons, emergency management procedures, inspections and oversight all demand renewed scrutiny. But more fundamentally, a shift away from incarceration, which disproportionately impacts already marginalised communities (who are also most at risk of climate change impacts), is the only effective and humane response.

This paper seeks to spark that conversation – to draw attention to the overlapping social and ecological harms of the prison system, and to make the case for why a just transition must include a focus on decarceration.