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Elmer Hubert Johnson - Japanese corrections: managing convicted offenders in an orderly society

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In his analysis of the current Japanese corrections system, internationally respected criminologist Elmer H. Johnson focuses on three basic questions: What are the characteristics of the major programmatic elements? How do various personnel carry out their programmatic responsibilities? Why are the various duties and activities carried out in a particular way?Johnson points out that compared with the United States, where prison populations are huge and often violent, Japan incarcerates relatively few criminals. In 1989, for example, Japan locked up only 34 out of every 100,000 citizens while the United States imprisoned people at a rate of 271 per 100,000. Examining the cultural differences leading to this disparity, Johnson notes that in Japan prosecutors are reluctant to refer defendants for trial and the courts often suspend sentences for convicted felons.In Japan, two bureausthe Correction Bureau and the Rehabilitation Bureauadminister all Japanese correctional activities. Placing these bureaus in the organizational scheme of the Ministry of Justice, Johnson traces the history, describes the organizational ideologies, and outlines the special features of each.A central feature of the Japanese penal system is the industrial prison, a concept that met such fierce opposition in the United States that it lost almost all access to the free market by the 1940s. Johnson traces the history of the industrial prison, noting particularly that the industrial operations in adult institutions explain in part why there is almost no violence and why few try to escape. Juvenile institutions enjoy similar success; even though they produce no industrial products, the juvenile training schools emphasize education, vocational training, and counseling.Japanese correctional officers rely heavily on the community and on unsalaried volunteer probation officers for supervision of probationers and parolees. Although Japanese courts regard probationary supervision as too punitive for most convicted defendants and return many to the community without supervision, the probation caseload is weighty. Johnson describes the responsibilities and operations of the Regional Parole Boards. He also discusses the aid hostels (halfway houses) that are primarily operated by private organizations and that serve released or paroled prisoners.Johnson sums up by noting that both the Correction Bureau and the Rehabilitation Bureau depend on the overall operations of police, prosecutors, and judges. More broadly, he asserts, both bureaus are creatures of Japanese society and culture. The assets and disadvantages of the bureaus reflect societys reluctance to sentence defendants to prison and, to a lesser extent, the reluctance to place them on probationary supervision.

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title Japanese Corrections Managing Convicted Offenders in an Orderly - photo 1

title:Japanese Corrections : Managing Convicted Offenders in an Orderly Society
author:Johnson, Elmer Hubert.
publisher:Southern Illinois University Press
isbn10 | asin:
print isbn13:9780809317363
ebook isbn13:9780585107868
language:English
subjectCorrections--Japan, Correctional institutions--Japan, Prisons--Japan, Community-based corrections--Japan.
publication date:1996
lcc:HV9813.J64 1996eb
ddc:364.6/0952
subject:Corrections--Japan, Correctional institutions--Japan, Prisons--Japan, Community-based corrections--Japan.
Page iii
Japanese Corrections
Managing Convicted Offenders in an Orderly Society
Elmer H. Johnson
Southern Illinois University Press
Carbondale and Edwardsville
Page iv
Copyright 1996 by the Board of Trustees,
Southern Illinois University
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
Design and production supervised by New Leaf Studio
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Johnson, Elmer Hubert.
Japanese corrections : managing convicted offenders in an orderly society / Elmer H. Johnson.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. CorrectionsJapan. 2. Correctional institutionsJapan.
3. PrisonsJapan. 4. Community-based correctionsJapan.
I. Title.
HV9813.J64 1996
364.6'0952dc20Picture 2Picture 3Picture 4Picture 595-20808
ISBN 0-8093-1736-2Picture 6Picture 7Picture 8Picture 9CIP
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information SciencesPermanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI 0Z39.48-1984.Picture 10
Page v
To the Japanese Fulbright Alumni and
Yoshiharu Shino of Osaka, whose
generous contributions to increase the
number of Fulbright Awards to Americans
for research and study in Japan
made this book possible
Page vii
Contents
Plates
ix
Tables
xi
Preface
xv
Map 1
Adult Correctional Institutions in Japan
xix
Map 2
Juvenile Correctional Institutions in Japan
xx
1. Introduction
1
2. Parsimony in Resort to Imprisonment
12
3. The Two Bureaus: Their Place, Functions, and History
42

Page viii
4. The Managers: Those Who Work in Corrections
59
5. The Industrial Prison
79
6. The Orderly Prison
121
7. The Juvenile Justice System
154
8. Community-Based Corrections: Japanese Version
190
9. Probation: Putting Convicted Offenders Back on the Street
225
10. Exiting from Confinement: Parole and Hostels
260
Notes
297
References
307
Index
325

Page ix
Plates
Following page 108
Headquarters of the Ministry of Justice in Tokyo
Wooden jail in Sendai
Original Miyagi Prison in Sendai
Products of the industrial prison (c. 1880)
Furniture production at Fuchu Prison, Tokyo Correction Region
Line of metal shelves entering automated painting stage at Okayama Prison, Hiroshima Correction Region
Arc-welding instruction at Kanazawa Prison, Nagoya Correction Region
Inmates at Toyama Prison, Nagoya Correction Region, building a model of a mikoshi
Single-person cell at Iwakuni Women's Prison
Sandbox diagnosis at Tokyo Juvenile Classification Home
Naginata exercise (ritual combat) at Haruna Juvenile Training School for Girls, Tokyo Correction Region
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