Searching, ‘State of Security’ and the structuration of prison security

This chapter discusses the practices of searching in prisons in England and Wales including recent developments in technology and attempts to engage with the social, sensory and emotional dimensions of searching. Prison searching is widely used and is one of the core components of situational securi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bennett, Jamie (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
Published: 2023
In: Body Searches and Imprisonment
Year: 2023, Pages: 27-44
Online Access: Volltext (Resolving-System)
Check availability: HBZ Gateway
Description
Summary:This chapter discusses the practices of searching in prisons in England and Wales including recent developments in technology and attempts to engage with the social, sensory and emotional dimensions of searching. Prison searching is widely used and is one of the core components of situational security, that is, measures that attempt to reduce opportunities for crime in prisons and increase the risks of detection. The chapter describes the different forms of searching deployed including the use of new technologies. It also draws upon data on finds of drugs, weapons and other contraband to evidence the salience of searching in the prison environment. Searching, however, also has sensory and emotional elements through the application of bodily contact. It is also an exercise of state power over people in prison. The social dimensions of searching are therefore also significant. This has always been recognised in law and policy that constrains and regulates the conduct of searching. Recent work in England and Wales has attempted to develop this further, encouraging engagement with ideas including ‘procedural justice’, ‘trauma-informed practice’ and recognising racial disproportionality in security and policing practices. These approaches attempt to increase fairness and legitimacy. While this development is in its early stages, it is a conscious attempt to engage with Sparks et al.’s (1996) concept of the ‘structuration of prison life’ involving an approach that “seeks to maximise the effects of, and to blend where possible, ‘legitimacy-based control’ and ‘situational control’”. The chapter concludes by discussing future prospects and ways in which this approach might be developed further.
Item Description:Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 41-44
Physical Description:Diagramm
ISBN:9783031204517
DOI:10.1007/978-3-031-20451-7_3