 Advances in Applied Sociology 2012. Vol.2, No.2, 135-142 Published Online June 2012 in SciRes (http://www.SciRP.org/journal/aasoci) http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/aasoci.2012.22018 Copyright © 2012 SciRe s . 135 To Be and Not to Be: Adaptation, Ambivalence and Ambiguity in a Danish Prison Malene Molding Nielsen Department of Sociolo g y, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, De nmark Email: malene@molding.dk Received March 1st, 2012; re v i s e d April 5th, 2012; accepted April 22nd, 2012 In a recent article on Scandinavian Exceptionalism, John Pratt urges that in era defined by a pre-occupa- tion with penal excess, we need to explore what we can learn from the Scandinavian regimes characterized by low levels of imprisonment and exceptional prison conditions. This paper complements Pratt’s com- parative historical work by scrutinizing the realities of people living and working inside one Scandinavian penal regime. It explores prisoners’ experiences of and adaption to institutional life focusing on imple- mentation of security and order and the motivational and supportive work. It describes a thriving co- presence of bewildering realities where prisoners’ adaptation is defined by a straining uncertainty, ambi- guity and ambivalence, and where moral divides are united in the Modus Vivendi of everyday life. In this context prisoners are expected to express regrets and aspire to reform by demonstrating they are morally on course and motivated to commence a life without crime. Instead prisoners mostly use the institutional reformative stimuli to pursue their own ends that are foreign to the system. The study describes a dis- crepancy between penal ideals and practices and suggests that penal realities as they are experienced from within may not match the level of exceptionalism that Pratt observes from the outside. Keywords: Moral Complexity; Institutional Logic; Adaptation; Ambiguity; Ambivalence; Prison Life Introduction In a recent award winning article that reports a comparative study on Scandinavian penal regimes, John Pratt describes the regimes as exceptional both with regard to their low levels of imprisonment and the material prison conditions (Pratt, 2008). He argues that in an era defined by a pre-occupation with penal excess, there is a need to change course and focus on what we can learn from exceptional regimes like the Scandinavian. While Pratt’s historical analysis and project is both interesting and sympathetic, it does not, focus on the life worlds’ and reali- ties of people who live and work inside penal institutions. This paper complements Pratt’s broad and comparative analysis by providing a snapshot of a Scandinavian penal regime from within. It scrutinises prisoners’ experiences of and adaptation to institutional life as it unfolds in relation to security and control and the penal supportive and motivational work in a Danish open prison. I argue that prisoners’ experiences of a nd adaptation to pr ison life are first and foremost characterised by ambiguity and am- bivalence that are enacted by officers and prisoners when they collaborate on the production of the Modus Vivendi that makes daily life. It is a Modus Vivendi characterised by pretence, negotiations, trade-offs and straining levels of uncertainty that accompany multiple formal and informal agendas and realities relating to security and control and the motivational and sup- portive penal work. I explain how, in this ambivalent and am- biguous penal context, it is difficult to establish a sense of safety and engage in a dialogue with staff on how to demon- strate motivation and start afresh without crime. I describe how prison daily practices make it challenging to distil what is mo- rally on course from what is morally astray, hence, making pe nal realit ies—as they are experie nced and enacted fro m wi th in - painful, uncertain and difficult to navigate. The study describes a discrepancy between the realities of penal practices and for- mal penal ideals; a discrepancy that comes with yet another call to rethink the implementation of punishment. Adaptation: Doing, Being and Experiencing There is no single pattern of adjustment to prison life (Crewe, 2005). A wealth of studies have added to the seminal work of Gresham Sykes and Erving Goffman who emphasised the im- portance of internally managed deprivations (Goffman, 1961; Sykes, 1958), and to that of Donald Clemmer who regarded adaptation as an assimilation process defined by parameters such as social exposure and time spent in prison (Clemmer, 1958). While contemporary scholars acknowledge the influence of confinement on identity, they argue that individuals carry their culture and personal histories with them inside penal in- stitutions where they are carefully managed (Cohen, 1994). Place of origin (Crewe, 2009), ethnic affiliation, gang life (Ja- cobs in Crewe, 2005), personal background, type of crime, age, networking capabilities and mental health, therefore, also affect prisoners’ well-being and adjustment (Crawley and Sparks, 2005; Crewe, 2009; Harvey, 2005; Liebling, 1999; Mathiesen, 1965). To this list, I could include penal policies, staff compo- sition and cultural and historical differences between penal institutions (Liebling & Arnold, 2004; Liebling & Maruna, 2005). In this article, I will primarily focus on prisoners’ net- works in- and outside prison and the institutional logic that accompanies penal policies and interaction. To explain and analyse how security, control and order, and aspects of the penal motivational and supportive work shape 135
 M. M. NIELSEN prisoners’ adaptation to and experiences of imprisonment, I will draw on Annemarie Mol, particul arly, her work on disease (Mol, 2002). In conceptualising ontology as enacted, she merges be- ing and doing and situates ontology in hospital daily interac- tions where she observes how Atherosclerosis is done. With detailed ethnographic observations in and around hospital de- partments, Mol unravels the co-existent, multiple realities of Atherosclerosis. She documents how these realities are enacted differently in diverse departments, but how they are interrelated in hospital everyday practices where the differences between them are bracketed, and they make the disease. With Actor Network Theory and the mathematical notion of intransitivity, Mol demonstrates how these diverse enactments of Athero- sclerosis “contain each other” because they are related, i.e., A includes B and B is also inside A, while, simultaneously, they are ontologically incompatible (Mol, 2002). It is against this background Mol argues, it is possible to understand Athero- sclerosis as more than one disease, yet, less than many. With her radical empiricist perspective on social life, Mol does not aim to account for life worlds and experiences and, as such, her analysis and approach differ from mine. In this analy- sis I am, nevertheless, inspired by her praxis-related approach because it allows me to analyse enactments of safety and order in prison as practices that are co-produced by officers and pri- soners; practices that are related, therefore, and that include diverse realities. I identify, at least two, divergent realities that shape prisoners’ adaptation to and experiences of imprisonment: one relating to formal penal ideals and practices established to implement punishment in a secure and orderly environment, and another relating to prisoners’ codes, conventions and ideals. Inspired by Mol’s work on Actor Network Theory and mathe- matical intransitivity, I have been able to unite these realities that tend to be accounted for and addressed as separate and distinct in prison research and, as such, this paper offers an alternative account of adaptation. In drawing on Mol who em- phasises the enacted nature of social life, I simultaneously em- phasise and add bodily rooted dimensions to ambiguity and ambivalence. I so doing, I give primacy to the experiencing body whilst honouring the realities I observed in prison. To connect enactments with emotional experiences and de- scribe how ambiguity and ambivalence come to constitute pi- votal characteristics of being in prison as a being-in-the-world (Gieser 2008), I draw on Vinciane Despret, in particular, her work on emotional theory (Despret, 2004). Despret argues that in emotional theory, it is difficult to distinguish between cause and effect because emotional experience belongs to a sphere where neither world, nor body, nor consciousness can be clearly separated and distributed (Despret, 2004). Instead she maintains that the body and what affects it produce each other, hence tying enactments to emotional life and experience. Finally, I use Michel de Certeau’s work (de Certeau, 1988) to describe prisoners’ adaptive strategies vis-a-vis institutional routines, aims and expectations. In explaining the operations and manipulations of the dominated, de Certeau scrutinises the ambiguity that subverted the Spanish colonizers in imposing their culture on indigenous Indians. Submissive, and even con- senting to their subjection, the Indians often made of the ri- tuals, representations and laws imposed on them something quite different from what their conquerors had in mind (de Certeau, 1988). They subverted them, not by rejecting or alter- ing them, but using them with respect to ends and references foreign to the systems they had no choice but to accept (de Certeau, 1988). Research Context and Approach This analysis is one result of an ethnographic study con- ducted in a Danish open male prison during a period of 10 months. With a phenomenological understanding of ethnogra- phy, I acknowledge that being can never be accounted for with reference to the subject alone. Being is inter-subjective and related to the world that surrounds us (see e.g. Rendtorff, 2004) as a being-in-the-world that is fundamental for generation of data and our interpretations of experience. However, although I seek to describe prisoners’ experiences of their social existence and practical activities that phenomenologists would refer to as the life world (Jackson, 1996), there is a disjunction between the world and our understanding of it (Husserl in Hastrup, 2005). When I account for experiences, I refer to prisoners’ articulations of experiences as they surfaced in daily interaction and in formal and informal interviews. As such my accounts are informed interpretations of my observations and interactions with people who lived and worked in prison. Throughout the study period I conducted informal interviews whilst observing staff-to-prisoner, staff-to-staff and prisoner-to- prisoner interactions in and around two prison wings1. My in- formal presence and interviews were complimented by formal semi-structured interviews conducted with two representatives of middle management, one with a senior manager and a ran- domly selected half of the prisoner and officer populations, i.e., with 19 prisoners and 13 prison officers. All but one of these interviews were recorded and transcribed. My observations were documented, mostly, by the end of each fieldwork day. To this end, I sought to recall native language and capture the ob- servational context. The material I present here stems from both informal observations and conversations and formal interviews. Although there are important differences between the Scan- dinavian regimes with regard to penal history, criminal law and sanctions (Pratt, 2008; Uglevik & Dullum 1212; Graunbøl et al., 2010), the Danish regime resembles, in many ways, the Swe- dish and Norwegian as described by Pratt. The Danish penal regime is fostered on egalitarian values and ideals (Borish, 1991) maintaining that punishment should not go beyond de- privation of liberty, and that prison life should, to the extent possible, model life outside the penal context (Engbo, 2005). It is rooted in welfare state security, has a history of low levels of imprisonment (Christie, 2001; Kristoffersen, 2010) and, in re- cent years, it has undergone changes defined by more and longer-term sentences, a tightening of security and control and an enhanced focus on demonstrating results. Furthermore, Da- nish prison conditions are what Pratt would refer to as both humane and liberal. In Denmark prisoners, ideally, serve time in penal institu- tions located in relative proximity to their home town although the Prison and Probation Service may decide against it if capa- city is limited or it is otherwise considered unjustifiable. The relatively liberal organisation of everyday life and the mostly short geographical distances may account for the importance attached in this analysis to prisoners’ external networks, and the extent to which they pursue their own agendas in their engage- ments with the penal institution. 1These wings did n ot offer any drug, alcohol or related treatment schemes. A special wing was established to cater for prisoners who wanted to enrol in such programmes. Copyright © 2012 SciRe s . 136
 M. M. NIELSEN Enacting Security and Threat As elsewhere, the Danish prison infrastructure and formal division of labour exhibit penal ideals for institutional interac- tion. They manifest who guards and who is guarded and, they direct the construction of persons classified by difference in social quality and moral character, as Goffman has convinc- ingly described (1961). While such penal ideals certainly frame the interaction of the Danish officers and prisoners, other diver- gent realities characterised by their unofficial nature and un- written rules have a simultaneous presence. As my interview transcript below demonstrates, the co-presence of formal and informal ideals and practices typically surface as trade-offs and compromises that make the Modus Vivendi of everyday life and that are accompanied by un-predictability and uncertainty. James is serving time and contrary to the majority of prison- ers I meet, James did not have a criminal career and lifestyle prior to conviction. Therefore, he has no practical sense of what it takes to manage prison life. While James’ experience is not surprising, it is illustrative because the tacit and informal rules and regularities that guard everyday interaction surface when James violates them and demonstrates his social inadequacies. James: “I tried to explain, they (the other prisoners) had to take into consideration I have another background (not crimi- nal).” Interviewer: “You said that?” James: “Yeah. So they slapped my face and things like that and kept on making all sorts of remarks and things—because they sensed I am different. I don’t have tattoos or anything...so I told them; ‘I’m not used to this kind of life.’” Interviewer: “Were you afraid?” James: “Yes, I was shocked when he slapped me.” Interviewer: “Did you defend or protect yourself?” James: “No. I told him; ‘you’ll not get far with that behav- iour, I’ll go straight to the officers and report you’.” Interviewer: “Did you say that?” James: “Yes, and I actually went into the office and told an officer what had happened, and she explained how it works in here. She said; ‘you can’t report an incident like that. If you want us to react, it has to be more serious—otherwise you’re just making your own life complicated.’ I got her message be- cause afterwards several of the other prisoners asked: ‘You didn’t report the slapping, did you?’ and I replied; ‘Yes, I did, because I didn’t know what else to do.’ But then it sorted itself out because my roommate, Danial, he knew Ben (prisoner), and Ben told them (the prisoners who harassed James) that if they ever even looked at me again, he and Hans (prisoner) would make sure they would never walk out of here. That’s how you have the prisoner hierarchy...so that saved me. I felt threatened, you know. They always approached me two at a time...” As should be evident, James’ inexperience reveals itself when he does not embrace the possibility of earning respect by demonstrating aggression, strength, fearlessness and a willing- ness not to submit by striking back (Crewe, 2009; Einat, 2005). It also surfaces in his initial naive belief in the institutionally defined authorities and their ability to support him. As one prisoner, who has spent years moving in and out of prisons, has it: “From time to time you get people (prisoners) who have no sense of how you operate in here and there has to be space for them to serve time as well.” The interview captures one important event from the begin- ning of James’ short-term prison experience that comes to in- fluence the way he chooses to manage the rest of his time. He does not report fellow prisoners again, and he continuously spends time securing good-will among inmates hoping this will earn him respect and protection if he is threatened another time. James is on guard, socialising and networking and, in so doing, establishing a sense of safety, order and control. Like other first time prisoners (Harvey, 2005), James is trou- bled. Young prisoners without a network or who otherwise appear vulnerable upon arrival tell stories that resemble James’. They are stories that point to the importance of creating respect and defining your position and reputation in relation to the in- mate social hierarchy. Both officers and prisoners are aware of this, accept it and act accordingly. James’ Contact Person lite- rally advices James to leave the incident unreported to avoid negative sanctions from other prisoners who are likely to think of him as an informer. Furthermore, James’ roommate refers James to Ben and Hans, two prisoners with social and eco- nomic capital, whose presence and reputation in prison guaran- tee James’ security that officers are not in a position to cater for at that point. The incident illustrates key informal principles of the Modus Vivendi where the real distribution of power is different from that which is formally claimed because the attempt to realise power is structurally defective (Sparks and Bottoms, 1995). Staff make the prison run, but they do not run the prison (Crewe, 2009) alone: the officer-prisoner relationship is cha- racterised by reciprocity and officers’ reliance upon inmate codes and conventions as a means to establish a relatively peaceful environment for serving time and running daily life. This comes across, e.g., when older experienced prisoners ex- plain to me, how they have an interest in maintaining order and security to avoid the presence of officers on the wing, thereby making the most of their time and safeguarding a sense of pri- vacy. It is, therefore, not surprising that James’ relationship with prisoners is characterised by ambivalence defined by a simul- taneous experience of security and threat. Prisoners not only constitute danger because they threaten him, they (Ben and Hans) also represent his rescue because they put an end to the harassment which the officer is not in a position to. It is from this perspective that prisoners come to surface as strong and powerful, vis-a-vis staff, despite t heir seemingly weak position. This does not imply that staff have no role to play with regard to order and safety. The daily monitoring of prisoners and their whereabouts, the cell searches and the regular transfer of pri- soners to solitary confinement exemplify security aspects of the officer role. James relationship with staff is not unambiguous either. By pointing to the importance of developing a positive relationship with other prisoners, instead of reporting them, and by indicat- ing there is help ahead, if violence and threats from the other prisoners escalate, James’ Contact Person offers, on the one hand, immediate support and potential, although conditional, rescue. On the other hand, she announces, she is not in a posi- tion to help James in a situation where he feels insecure and threatened, hence leaving James in a distressing and ambiguous place. His interaction with prisoners and staff evokes conflict- ing feelings that come across, e.g., when he explains; he feels safe (after three months) but, nevertheless, continues to do other prisoners favours to make sure they owe him one. In practice, prisoners’ sense of security, control and order stems both from the formal ideals and practices of the system and the Copyright © 2012 SciRe s . 137
 M. M. NIELSEN informal ones that are united in the experience of imprison- ment. In discussing how, in emotional theory, cause-effect rela- tionships blur Despret asks: “am I scared because the world is terrifying or is the world terrifying because I am scared?” In so doing, she points to how emotions belong to a sphere of ex- periences where casual relationships are difficult to distinguish and neither world, nor body, nor consciousness can be clearly separated and distributed (Despret, 2004) rather: the world affects the mind and the mind the world. It is when the body and what affects it produce each other that Despret argues; we make ourselves available to the world. Although I recognise that availability in prison is enforced, I will argue that James’ being in prison is defined in a similar way: he is simultaneously affecting it and affected by it. He feels both threatened and secure and he acts on these feelings that come to influence how he experiences and chooses to manage everyday life. In letting the other prisoners harass him, James participates in enactments of threat and, in accepting help from his network among pri- soners, he enacts safety. Or with Despret’s frame of thinking, James makes himself available to security and threat. He feels and enacts secure and threatened, making ambivalence and ambiguity defining features of his being-in-prison as it unfolds in everyday life, his relationship with the other prisoners and with staff. It is from this perspective that ambiguity and ambi- valence become dominant embedded characteristics of prison life. Although James’ story is unique because it simultaneously points to a lack of network, inexperience and inability to navi- gate criminal codes and conventions, the thriving co-presence of ambivalent and ambiguous feelings and enactments also come across in my i n terviews with other prisoners as a common feature of their existence in prison. I also observe ambivalent feelings related to power. An ex- perienced prisoner, Tim, describes to me how imprisonment makes him feel powerless and out of control, yet, when we discuss ethnic tensions on the wing he explains: “...And staff, well staff, they are actually relieved we (socially powerful prisoners) are here because we can manage them (ethnic mi- norities) which they (staff) are not able to.” The reality of prison life is defined by a complex blend of severe feelings and beings such as being and feeling powerful and powerless. They are discrete feelings and beings that co-exist and are connected in practice because the location of powerful in everyday life is often also the locat io n of powerless. With Mol in mind, one could argue that security, control and order are established and enacted differently by officers and prisoners because they are guarded by divergent ideals, conven- tions, norms and practices. With separate value systems, moral orientations, legal statuses, codes and conventions, and with different levels of transparency, the criminal world and that of the penal system are ontologically incompatible. However, their differences are bracketed in practice where the order and safety prisoners establish is mostly acknowledged by officers because it allows officers to operate relatively smoothly and vice versa. The realities of officers and prisoners are intertwined in prison life as one makes possible the enactment of the other. As Mol has it, to be is to be related (Mol, 2002), and it is from this per- spective that one includes the other. Both officers and prisoners make order and security, and, in so doing, they become a part of each others’ realities. As enacted and related realities the criminal world and penal system and ideals unite in experience. Although an element of predictability characterises these in- compatible, yet, intertwined enacted realities, they are also un- predictable because they are enactments, and as enactments, they are dynamic and subject to change. It is this unpredictabi- lity that evokes doubt about what realities frame everyday life and when. James, e.g., does not know when his experience of being insecure may qualify for staff assistance, and he never knows, when he has networked and socialised enough with prisoners to secure himself. Adaptation: Internal and External Networks Whether prisoners are transferred from a maximum security prison, from a detention or come directly from home, most prisoners I meet draw on their established social networks when they settle in. They have a sense of how to operate the criminal codes and conventions and, therefore, they are better prepared than James. While serving time, the adaptation of most prisoners and their sense of security, control and order depend to a large ex- tent on their networking capabilities in- and outside of prison. Danial, a prisoner who was previously a full-time criminal, pedagogically expla i n s ; “As in other spheres of life, introduction matters. I’ve a friend whose friend, Tim, serves time here so when I arrived my friend asked Tim (an influential prisoner) to receive me. So when I checked in, Tim called Hans, introduced us and asked Hans to look after me—that’s why I know Tim now... So if something bothers me, I talk to Tim about it, and he’ll sort it out. He has been here a long time... I look after Brian, the little guy, but I also expect him to do me a favour, if I ask for it. That’s how it works... In this way, you end up knowing a lot of people.” Prisoners hang out in cliques defined by a variety of factors such as their criminal networks and interests, personal talents, age and attitude to imprisonment. Apart from providing for each others’ safety, they use their networks to socialise and pass time and share information about the informal and formal workings of the prison and the services it provides. At all levels in the prisoner hierarchies, prisoners’ use these networks strate- gically. As Jimmy (prisoner) describes it: “The older you get, the more you think about what you do, and if you’re planning to remain criminal, you may think; “oh well, it’s a bad idea to fall out with him because if I do, I’ll close the door behind me at the expense of good contacts and potential business opportunities.” Outside realities have a strong presence inside prison in terms of shaping prisoners’ networks, alliances and activities. In shaping prisoners’ networks, social life and sense of security inside, outside realities also influence how prisoners interact with officers, and officers’ abilities to effectively intervene and comprehend prisoners’ affairs. As realities operating from out- side, they surface only subtly in the alliances and obligations that shape prisoners’ networks and that are not always visi ble t o staff. In penal institutions prisoners are units in a wider network that illuminate the functionality and usefulness of alternative, informal networks, rules and approaches to life. This does not imply that the penal system has no significance in terms of shaping prison life. Staff composition and profes- sional orientation, the implementation of new policies or the public resources invested in penal institutions obviously in- fluence daily life. In general, however, I observe that staff play Copyright © 2012 SciRe s . 138
 M. M. NIELSEN a limited role when prisoners’ settle in both in terms of their capacity to intervene—as James’s story illustrates—and also in terms of providing information to prisoners about prison rou- tines and life and the possibilities they offer. Whether prisoners are novices, like James, or experienced criminals, they have to take into account the multiplicity that characterise enactments of security, control and order. Furthermore, they have to cope with the uncertainties, ambiguities and ambivalences that the intertwined realties generate; realities that prisoners and staff enact and embody. Puzzling Dialogue The first of April 2004 a new penal policy was introduced in Denmark. In effect the policy rewards prisoners an early release, i.e., half time, if they demonstrate a special effort to start afresh without crime. Along with other policies2, this policy provided directions for the implementation of the Prison and Probation Service mission: to complete punishment with control and se- curity, and support and motivate convicts to live a life without crime through personal and social development (Kriminalfor- sorgen, 2000). Although the first of April 2004 policy, in practice, involves only a fraction of the total prisoner population (RoPaD, 2006- 2009), the way in which prisoners respond to it exemplifies well how I generally observe prisoners adapt to and navigate the possibilities and constraints of the penal system. As such, the response of prisoners to this policy provides a typical exam- ple of institutional penal interaction relating to the supportive and motivational work. The possibilities available for convicts to demonstrate their non-criminal aspirations typically involve participation in of- fender behaviour courses, e.g., cognitive skills programmes, and anger management- and drug programmes (RoPaD, 2006). Other possibilities relate to prisoners’ educational skills and their efforts to improve these. The policy, hence cultivates compliance with the moral values and normative orientation of mainstream society and the capabilities of individuals to lead a life without crime. Prisoners who decide to pursue an early release typically regulate their behaviour or align it with institutional goals as they sign up for different programmes or apply for courses. In so doing, they appear to take responsibility for their own per- sonal development (see also Bosworth and Carrabine, 2001; Crewe, 2007) whereby one could argue that aspects of ac- countability and governance shift from the institution to the individual prisoner. Not all prisoners are equally competent or strategic in terms of the way they choose to navigate institutional possibilities. Kim, an educated prisoner with a job on stand-by outside, con- fides with me that he is planning to apply for an early release, and he had looked, therefore, at ways in which it will be sensi- ble for him to demonstrate his aspirations to start afresh. But how do you express will and motivation in a penal institutional context? With what you say or do, or with what you refrain from saying or doing? As my fieldnote extracts below illustrate this is not an easy task. Kim: “I don’t want to apply for an apprenticeship or a truck licence—as most people do. I have applied for a course that adds to the educational background I already have. I have been discussing this with the prison for months now—the idea be- ing, of course, eh... I apply for an educational course so I can get an early release. But I am stuck. When the social workers here call the Prison and Probation Service at the Municipa- lity, staff at the Municipality claim they provide financial sup- port to such courses whereas the social workers and the offi- cer here (Kim’s Contact Person) argue that, if you already have an education, the Prison and Probation Service doesn’t sup- port additional courses. Meanwhile, time passes and now I have so little time left, it nearly doesn’t make sense to apply any- more.” As Kim clarifies his application process has been long and painful, and when I leave, i.e., ten months after he started to prepare for an early release, his application is still not processed or approved, and Kim has served half time months back. I un- derstand that Kim has had a conflict with the social workers and his Contact Person on what he experiences as bureaucratic inefficiency, lack of transparency in decision making processes and slow progress. When I meet Kim’s Contact Person I learn that Kim initially told him (the Contact Person) that he (Kim) would apply for an educational course in order to get an early release. The Contact Person tells me: “I told Kim, he has to do something exceptional to get an early release, and he hasn’t. So, Kim tells me, he’ll apply for an education in order to get an early release, although, he knows, he’ll never make use of it. It doesn’t make sense to apply for an education, if you know, you’ll never use it... so he’ll have to apply, and we’ll have to reject his application.” Kim’s story resembles those of other prisoners who staff come to look upon as unreliable and difficult. They become prisoners who take advantage of the system; prisoners who pretend to be, do or want things that do not correspond with reality, in this case applying for a course Kim does not believe he will ever use. They become prisoners who staff do not trust and, therefore, resist. As Kim’s Contact Person rationally notes: “It doesn’t make sense to apply for an education, if you know, you’ll never use it...” In revealing that he actually wants an early release and, therefore, applies for an educational course, instead of simply and subtly expressing, he is planning to take a training course because he wants to reform his life or seeks to improve himself, Kim comes to appear insincere. The applica- tion process accentuates the image of Kim as a kind of person who does not subject to collectively defined ideals and ideas of right and wrong; a criminal who is morally astray. Similar to the role religion was ascribed by prison reformers in the establishment of the modern Danish prison during the second half of the nineteenth and the first half of the twentieth century (Scharff Smith, 2003), the implementation of the new policy extends the moral project of the institution. This is a moral project where the ideal prisoner is expected to reform and repent; a moral orientation also observed in recent studies of social work (Jarvinen & Mik-Meyer, 2003). In this study re- form refers to a morally informed change in the individual prisoner towards compliance with collectively defined ideals of right and wrong. Repent refers to an institutional expectation towards prisoners to express regret. I will primarily focus on reform in this analysis. 2Other initiatives introduced in this period included, e.g., the implementation of a zero drug tolerance with mandatory drug testing; an initiative that like- wise promoted compliance with rules and regulations (Flerårsaftale, 2004- 2007). The moral project likewise reflects the orientation of Danish penal policies from the beginning of the twentieth century and until the 1970 ties that were marked by a treatment ideology. Copyright © 2012 SciRe s . 139
 M. M. NIELSEN Crime and deviancy were considered pathological, and crime was essentially related to the individual rather than to society’s failure to cater for its citizens and, as a result, it could only be attended to through treatment and moral rehabilitation. The last three decades have seen a rejuvenation of the treatment ide- ology although treatment now has a status similar to that of education and employment (see also Engbo, 2005). The moral project emerges as an ideal in staff discussions and assessments of prisoners, and it surfaces in institutional expectations, i.e., in what is said, done, rewarded and punished. For example, upon arrival of re-offenders, or when they leave prison, I often hear staff saying either: “so you didn’t get the message,” or “you better learn to behave,” indicating, in a friendly tone, the moral distinction between staff and prisoners and the necessity of prisoners to continue to aspire for reform. While it is possible Kim aspires to reform and regrets his criminal acts, he does not communicate it in a way that owes justice to the institutional moral logic and imperative. To ap- propriately honour the moral project, Kim should ideally ex- press determination to reform through the choices he makes. In addition, he should silence any personal doubts about or devia- tions from institutional ideals; a behaviour that requires strategy, self-control and discretion. As should be evident from the fieldnote extracts, you certainly do not reveal the possible miss- ing link between the relevance or quality of institutionally available possibilities such as training courses and offender programmes, your aspirations to reform your life and start afresh, and your plea for release. Another prisoner, Hans, convincingly explains how it should be done. Hans confides with me, he uses other prisoners to scrutinise and plan the possibilities for an early release; in this case, a release that includes participation in a training course outside prison during his last months of confinement: “When my Contact Person comes, I’ll have everything in control, you know, so I appear to be a person with a drive; a person who has a plan, you know, instead of saying—ehh, I don’t know, what I want, I just want a life where I get out of prison every day—that doesn’t really work, you know.” As the extract from my interview with Hans illustrates, most prisoners are aware how they should appear in order to conform to the penal moral project. This does not imply that some pri- soners do not withdraw from contact with staff altogether, but it implies that those who engage with staff mostly plan their en- gagements carefully. It also does not imply that prisoners do not think they might benefit from the educational and other skills, they may acquire whilst attached to the prison system. However, they mostly express, they use their participation in offender or educational programmes to get a good report or to spend parts of their day outside prison so they can attend to other interests, in particular, being in regular contact with fa- mily, partners and friends, or maintain different income gener- ating activities. It also does not imply, they cannot reveal to staff their strategic interests or “amoral” thinking. This, how- ever, is typically done with a smile that frames such utterances as humorous only. As my field work progresses, I come to realise that prisoners are not rewarded with the benefits on offer through penal po- licies and daily practices if, like Kim, they do not manage to circumvent the moral project by carefully disguising their aspi- rations. The puzzling concern related to this observation is, of course, that Kim transparently reveals what he (and most other prisoners) intends to do, and that he from this perspective is both sincere and trustworthy. His transparency and trustwor- thiness are not rewarded, however, because his intentions are not considered legitimate and in line with the ideal implementa- tion of the penal moral project and policy. In other words, while Kim was punished with exclusion from society because he did not behave in accordance with collec- tively defined ideals of right and wrong, i.e., he was unreliable and jurisdictionally and morally astray—he may have been rewarded with goodwill or a rapid inclusion back into main- stream society, had he convincingly pretended to be reliable and morally on course. Meanwhile, prisoners, like Hans, who are strategic in their communication with staff; they are the ones who benefit from staff goodwill and, at times, possibly also an early release. As such and in comparison with the penal institutional work related to security and control, the supportive and motivational work is also characterised by ambiguity and ambivalence. In so being, ambiguity and ambivalence not only typify the institu- tional logic and incentive system, it cultivates specific kind of clients: prisoners who simultaneously enact and embody com- pliance and non-compliance. Adaptive Strategies: Soft Power, Resistance, or Means to Personal Ends? If one uses a Foucaudian perspective, it is difficult not to understand the self governance and endless manoeuvring and circumvention of the system as a blend of resistance, i.e., reac- tions to the disciplinary grip of the penal regime, and manifes- tations of soft power. With soft power I refer to versions of power that do not constrain, command or suppress the indivi- dual as much as stimulate the subject, and where the distinction between choice and necessity is, therefore, blurred (Crewe, 2009; Garland, 1997). While this is probable, the interpretive road I will take, in this analysis, is simply to note that prisoners’ compliance and aligning of their behaviour with the expectations of governing authorities is, mostly, impression management implemented as opportunist and pragmatic attempts to pursue personalised ends. In other words, while penal institutional life clearly is sought to stimulate individuals to proactively take responsibility for their own development and improved moral performance, the stimu- lation mostly, does not imply moral or normative compliance. Prisoners rather use available stimuli as means to other ends. Time and again prisoners describe how they use rules and regulations to advance their own agendas both in and outside prison. Thomas, e.g., has a small company that he would like to attend to from prison which has not been easy to organise. Like many other prisoners, he has used official rules and procedures to make this possible, and he has had to accept both frustrations and delays related to the penal bureaucracy. When I meet him, he has successfully established himself in a position where he is formally doing an apprenticeship that is being monitored with control calls and visits while, in reality, and through an infor- mal set-up, he is attending to his company. Another prisoner, Frank, describes to me how, in a similar fashion, he used his high blood pressure as an excuse to get a cell on his own thereby avoiding to share a cell with a prisoner he dislikes (prisoners are initially placed in a cell that sleeps two). Frank: “When you have been in and out of prison, like me, you get to know a few tricks.” Copyright © 2012 SciRe s . 140
 M. M. NIELSEN Interviewer: “Yeah?” Frank: “So I got hold of my General Practitioner (GP) who wrote, eh, if you know your GP you can sort out things. So the GP wrote to the prison nurse.” Interviewer: “And then you what?” Frank: “Well, then, when I got my pills (against high blood pressure), I just didn’t take them, and then my blood pressure went up. So when I went to the prison doctor, well then, I got a room on my own very fast—cause I needed calm, right?!” Frank does not question, he has to share a cell with another prisoner. Instead, he uses one local authority, the prison nurse, to push for a single room in a way that is considered legitimate in the penal system. By not taking the pills his GP prescribed, Frank demonstrates, how his blood pressure rises in relation to imprisonment, and how, urgently, he needs calm and a room on his own. Frank and Thomas have their own references and ends and similar to how de Certeau depicts the reaction of Indians to their colonizers (de Certeau, 1988): they make of the rituals, representations and laws imposed on them something quite different from what their conquerors have in mind. They sub- vert them not by rejecting or altering them, but by using them with respect to ends and references foreign to the system they have to accept (de Certeau, 1988). In so doing, they deflate its power and come to appear to escape the regime without leaving it. In pursuing their own interests, prisoners draw on their per- sonal talents, institutional experiences and criminal habitual behaviour that for obvious reasons promote oppositional values but that do not necessarily come about as a reaction to the penal regime per se. While Thomas clearly expresses he regards the police and the penal system as his enemies, his accounts of how he handles both in-and outside of prison, respectively, do not differ radically: both in-and outside prison he acknowledges their official status and devices strategies to circumvent them. As such, the adaptive strategies of Thomas, Frank and many other prisoners bring to light the furtive forms taken by groups or individuals who make the most of imprisonment. Concluding Discussion: To Be and Not to Be In analysing prisoners’ experiences of and adaptation to prison life, as I have done in this text, the being and doing of officers and prisoners merge in a praxis-bound ontology at the expense of a clear moral divide as, e.g., Goffman has described it (Goffman, 1961). Officers and prisoners become co-partici- pants in enactments of realities characterised by criminal codes, conventions and practices, and penal ideals, procedures and ac- tions. I have argued that these realities with their diverse value systems, legal statuses, moral orientations, ideals and means of establishing order and security are incompatible. I have also de- monstrated how they are intertwined in daily practices where they are related because one makes possible the enactment of the other. The result is, on the one hand, bewildering because we have lost an ideal conception of right and wrong as each others’ op- posites where one excludes the other. Furthermore, we have added a dimension to the uncertainties of prison life, the pains, by pointing to the doubts that the presence of multiplicity evokes because it is not always clear what realities are enacted and when. On the other hand, we have also gained: namely the necessity to rethink the two as simultaneous and united in the same locations, i.e. in prison and the enactments and expe- riences of people who live and work there. In so doing, prisons, officers and prisoners not only manifest a moral divide; they also enact a moral sameness that includes moral opposites. Following this line of argument, it is not a question of being trustworthy or untrustworthy, right or wrong, sincere or insin- cere, morally astray or morally on course, but rather a question of being and not being: a question of being both at the same time. With Despret I have connected enactments with experience making ambiguity and ambivalence pivotal characteristics of adaptation and being in prison; characteristics that reflect the multiple realities of officers and prisoners and the relationships they have with each other. In adapting to prison life, prisoners draw extensively on their networks in-and outside of prison to provide safety and collect information about staff, rules, regulations, daily life and the possibilities that this offers. In this context, I have argued staff play only a limited role. I have also argued that although pri- soners’ adaptive strategies are subject to change, and it is pos- sible to diversify them, a general picture emerges nevertheless. In relation to the penal supportive and motivational work, ad- aptation mostly comes with a circumvention of a penal ideal moral project that staff assess prisoners in terms of, i.e.: by rewarding those who comply with it and resisting those who do not. The moral project provides an institutional imperative and logic that, together with the implementation of penal policies, seek to stimulate individual prisoners to take responsibility for a morally aligned future and life. I have explained how pri- soners mostly do take responsibility for their lives, however, in ways that are foreign to the penal system and its moral ideals. By pretending an alliance with institutional ideals, prisoners circumvent the moral project while, simultaneously, using in- stitutional stimuli to pursue diverse individual ends. Against this background, I argue that prisoners deflate institutional power and appear to escape the regime and its ideals without leaving it. I have also argued that in this context, institutional interac- tion can be perplexing when prisoners are met with staff resis- tance because they do not manage the art of convincingly pre- tending moral alliance, whereas prisoners who pretend with conviction are rewarded with good will. This typically happens when staff comes to regard prisoners as morally astray, insin- cere and untrustworthy because they communicate intentions in ways that do not honour the institutional logic and policies. It is against this background, staff appears, simultaneously, to im- plement ideals and policies that promote moral rightness and incentives schemes that favour those who are morally astray, hence, adding layers of ambiguity to prison life. Although the Scandinavian regimes expose exceptional cha- racteristics through their extraordinary good material conditions, their low levels of imprisonment and their ideal emphasis on punishment as deprivation of liberty only, these regimes may also come with additional challenges, as this analysis demon- strates. Prisoners’ experiences of and adaptation to prison life are characterised by a striking lack of clarity that unveils a dis- crepancy between penal institutional ideals and practices; a discrepancy that calls for a rethinking of the implementation of punishment that is visionary and relevant because it reflects an awareness of penal everyday realities as they can be observed from within. Copyright © 2012 SciRe s . 141
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