Bars of Suffocation: A Critical Review of the Covid-19 Pandemic and its Effect on Correctional Facilities in South Africa

Author:

Sibisi Nomakhosi Nomathemba1ORCID,Masuku Mfundo Mandla2ORCID,Mphatheni Mandlenkosi Richard3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Criminology and Forensic Studies, University of KwaZulu-Natal, College of Humanities, Durban, South Africa.

2. School of Built Environment and Development Studies and Forensic Studies, University of KwaZulu-Natal, College of Humanities, Durban, South Africa.

3. Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, College of Humanities, University of Limpopo Polokwane, South Africa.

Abstract

The study’s objective was to give a critical analysis of the Covid-19 pandemic, while also assessing the influence of Covid-19 on correctional facilities in South Africa. The correctional society was not immune to the detrimental impacts of COVID-19, and its arrival forced all South African correctional facilities to take several measures, including limitations on correctional facility visitation and the early release of some offenders. Therefore, the study ought to review the impact measures devised to address this global scourge. A literature review analysis was adopted by the authors. The study critically analysed existing papers, which included; government documents/reports and scholarly papers. Thus, a qualitative content analysis was adopted for the data analysis. The study discovered that the measures that were implemented in correctional centres to address the spread of COVID-19 resulted in some incarcerated persons being released while not fully rehabilitated. The release of some of the inmates was based on the urge to reduce the overpopulation within the correctional centres. The study also discovered that the South African Correctional facilities had challenges with physical social distancing due to overcrowding. The study recommends that the administration and functions of prisons be objectively measured by the number of stakeholders and the gradation of specialist bodies to maximise the culture of efficient governance that is human rights oriented. This study adds to the existing literature on ensuring the safety of inmates of correctional facilities in South Africa. Keywords: COVID-19, Correctional Facilities, Prisoner, Incarcerated Person, South Africa

Publisher

Noyam Publishers

Reference53 articles.

1. Agboola, Caroline. “Memories of the ‘Inside’ conditions in South African Women’s Prisons.” South African Crime Quarterly 56 (2016): 19–26.

2. Beyrer, Chris, Adeeba Kamarulzaman, and Martin McKee. “Prisoners, Prisons, and HIV: Time for Reform.” The Lancet 388, no. 10049 (September 2016): 1033–35. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(16)30829-7.

3. Bruce-Lockhart, A. “Africa ‘Least Affected’ by COVID-19; Hydroxycholoroquine Trial Suspended.” World Economic Forum, WHO Briefing, 2020. https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2020/05/covid19-africa-hydroxycholoroquine-world-health-organization/.

4. Cabeliza, Stella May, Jonathan Chiong, Peilong Li, Avelonia Vea, Xiaolin Liu, Mo Li, Yi Tang, Lingling Dai, Lianfei Yin, and Jun Yang. “Bringing Education to the Communities: Its Conceptualization, Implementation & Evaluation.” Language, Literature and Society 2019, 2019, 39.

5. Cameron, Edwin. “The Crisis of Criminal Justice in South Africa.” South African Law Journal 137, no. 1 (2020): 32–71.

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