Self-injury, defined as the
act of deliberately harming your own body, is a common behavior among certain
groups of inmates1. This is determined because among the imprisoned population
there are a series of related factors which are more common than in the general
population. On one hand, psychopathology is more prevalent in this population,
especially as far as depression and anxiety are concerned but regarding
psychopathology and impulse control disorders too, all of them related to
self-harming behaviors2-3. On the other hand, correctional facilities are
socially isolated settings which involve the development of a culture of their
own. When anthropologists consider human culture, they usually refer to a
certain lifestyle, socially acquired between a group of people which manifests
as standard recurrent ways of thinking, feeling and acting. The term subculture
is used to make reference to certain models of culture particular to certain
groups within society4. Life in prison facilitates the expression and
maintenance of a specific subculture among inmates. Most of the inmates show in
their behavior a series of values permeated by the marginalization of the
social groups to which they belonged before their imprisonment. Other learnt
and shared behavior and thinking patterns are developed as a consequence of
their own experience of imprisonment and become part of what we could define as
a real penitentiary subculture.
Below: It is common that some
inmates simultaneously harm themselves to support a third inmate or that in a
particular module some are forced to self-injury behaviors upon the order of a
"Kie" of boss, in an attempt to manipulate the environment. Usually,
the most common form of self-injury: puncture on the left arm, is used as a
means of protest charged with drama and aggressiveness against regimental
decisions.
Full article
at: http://goo.gl/ELb66N
By: J.M. Arroyo-Cobo
General Sub-Directorate for the Coordination of Prison
Health
General Secretariat of Penitentiary Institutions
General Secretariat of Penitentiary Institutions
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