CONNECTICUT's FAVORITE INMATE

Michael Liebowitz

Michael Liebowitz, co-author of Down the Rabbit Hole, is an inmate at the Osborne Correctional Institute in Somers, CT. Deconstructing that culture, Down The Rabbit Hole offers a unique perspective on why corrections more often than not fails to achieve its stated goals.

 

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Ending Mass Incarceration 6 parts

By Michael Liebowitz

Part 6

Privately Fund a Significant Portion of Reform Programs

            I would like to see the bulk of the suggested offender reform programs – including education – privately financed. This could be done through charity, social impact bonds, or some combination of the two. Privately funded program will likely be cheaper, more effective , and would avoid the incessant debates about whether tax dollars should be spent in this manner.

            The economist David Friedman asserted that anything done by government could be done in the private sector for half the cost.  98  While I don’t know if anyone has ever tested this hypothesis, or if the ratio is exact, I do believe the principle is accurate. This is because when the government funds a project, those in charge of how the money gets spent know that the government can always get more via taxes. 

They thus have little incentive to monitor how much they’re spending, or how they could spend less and achieve the same result. On the other hand, private donors are likely to take a great interest in how efficiently their money is being spent. And given that they aren’t being forced to provide it, they are likely to stop doing so if it isn’t being spent wisely. Importantly, those making spending decisions know this, and are therefore incentivized to make as efficient use of the funds as they can.

            Privately funded programs are likely to be more effective than if funded by the government for the same reason they’d be cheaper. Namely, if the programs don’t achieve the results desired by the donors, those doors will likely discontinue funding hem. In other words, privately funded programs are likely to be more effective because the financial managers of private programs will be held accountable by those paying their salaries.

            Finally, with taxpayers not being compelled to pay for the programs, they’re unlikely to be concerned with how many are being provided. They will have little incentive to protest, petition their representatives, or otherwise complain. And absent pressure from their constituents, such representatives would have little reason to oppose the programs.

Core Correctional Practices

Anti-criminal Modeling – Staff serve as an anti-criminal model for offenders by engaging in prosocial behaviors and reinforcing them when they do the same.

Effective Reinforcement – Staff use effective reinforcement to reinforce a specific behavior that includes immediate statement of approval and support and the reasons why this behavior is desirable followed by consideration of the short-and-long-term benefits associated with continued use of the behavior.

Effective Disapproval – Staff use effective disapproval to communicate disapproval for a specific behavior that includes immediate statements of disapproval and the reasons why this behavior is undesirable followed by consideration of the short-and-long-term costs associated with continued use of the behavior and a clear demonstration of an alternate, prosocial behavior.

Effective Use of Authority – Staff make effective use of their authority by guiding offenders toward compliance, which includes focusing their message on the behavior exhibited, being direct and specific concerning their demands, and specifying the offender’s choices and attendant consequences.

Problem Solving – Problem solving is a specific social skill that is taught to offenders to address a variety of high-risk situations.

Relationship Skills – Effective staff possess several critical relationship skills including warm, open, non-judgmental, empathetic, flexible, engaging, solution-focused and directive.

Cognitive Restructuring – Staff need to help offenders understand the link between their thoughts and their behavior: What they think (e.g., attitudes, thoughts, and beliefs) affects how someone emotionally and behaviorally responds to a given situation, as opposed to situations directly dictating a person’s response.

Skill Building – In order for an offender to learn ways to behave, staff need to teach and proactive new skills with offenders. There are cognitive skills (e.g., how well people solve problems, experience empathy toward others, and rationally assess situations ) that affect how a person behaves.

Motivational Enhancement –  Effective staff help motivate offenders to change by increasing intrinsic motivation (getting them to want to change). Techniques include motivational interviewing, weighing  the pros and cons, and goal setting.

Listen to Michael’s PODCASTS

Back to Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4 or Part 5

            Taken from “What Works (and Doesn’t) in Reducing Recidivism”, p. 64, by Edward J. Latessa, Shelley J. Listwan and Deborah Koetzle, (2015)


96 ibid

97 Dreisinger, Baz, Incarceration Nations p. 222 (2016).

98 Friedman, David, The Machinery of Freedom, Third Edition