Inmate Quadrant Analysis
Prisoner rehabilitation is a costly affair and a heavy burden to the tax payers.  Billions are spent to assist the criminals to turn over a new leaf while they are serving their sentence. The goal of rehabilitation is to reform the prisoners from committing crimes and assisting them in starting normal lives once they are released to the main stream of society.   The house of rehabilitation is set up in every prison with numerous therapeutic and educational programs to assist them to self-actualize besides helping them to acquire the living skills to prepare them to earn a decent livelihood and live a normal life.

 

According to an online article “Prisoner Rehabilitation” (http://www.rehabilitations.org/prisoner-rehabilitation.html accessed 12 April 2012); research indicates approximately 70% of the released prisoners return to jail within a few years.  They are stucked with their old,  die hard habits as envisaged in the high    rate of recidivism among offenders.  In addition, there  are  cases of small offenders who evolve to become big offenders when they return to jail.

 

In view of the above, there is a need to develop a self-renewal quadrant analysis to enable the prison officers to identify the types of prisoners, recognize their pattern of behavior  and help them  more effectively to change for the better.

 

Self- renewal of a prisoner  is a function of the need, desire or wants to change or reform and  the environment.  The objective of the house of rehabilitation  is to energize these inner states for change. During the period of sentencing  while the prisoner is going through  the rehabilitation programs, the prison officers as change agents  must be able to identify prisoner with high needs, desire or want for change and those with low needs , wants or desire for change.

 

Hence, prisoners lie on the continuum of  “I don’t want to reform and live a normal life” to “I want to  reform and live a normal life” as shown below:

 

 

Self renewal is also a function of how the prisoners perceive the environment.  A perceived favorable environment energizes and facilitates  the desire or wants to change or reform.  A perceived  unfavorable environment diminishes  and eventually stops  the want or  desire to reform and live a normal life.

 

Hence the environment of a prisoner lies in the continuum of  Perceived unfavorable to perceived unfavorable environment

 

 

Crossing the two continuums a Performance Quadrant Analysis (PQA) is developed to classify prisoners   into different types  as shown  in the figure below:

 

 

Q1:   The early adopter

 

An early adopter is a prisoner who perceives the environment is

favorable for him/her to reform and live a normal life and wants to reform.

 

Below are  the behavioral indicators of the adopter:

An inmate who wants to reform and perceives the environment as favorable. Marked by the following characteristics:

  • Demonstrates positive attitude towards self and others
  • Works hard to acquire vocational and living skills
  • Participates actively in community services
  • Avoids getting into trouble with psychopaths and drug addicts
  • High commitment to change for the better
  • Cooperative and helpful
  • Shows matured behavior
  • Believes in self to change for the better
  • Readily admits and become apologetic when they make mistakes and willing to learn from them
  • High respect for rules and regulations
  • Respects others’ rights and properties
  • Obeys and carries out prison officer’s instructions
  • Able to take criticisms and reprimands calmly
  • Walks one’s talk
  • Trustworthy, reliable and responsible
  • Displays great enthusiasm at work
  • Receptive to counseling programs
  • Helpful and cooperative
  • Able to get along well with others

Q2:   The resistor is a prisoner who has made up his or her mind initially not  to reform but at a later stage is partially influenced by the favorable environment causing him or her to be indecisive to change and live a normal life.

Demonstrates lack of trust for the prison authority

  • Demonstrates lukewarm interest to acquire vocational and living skills
  • Inconsistent in following rules and regulations
  • Erratic performance
  • Moderate commitment to reform
  • Average intellectual and analytical skills
  • Able to see parts of the big and small picture
  • Quite stubborn and hard headed
  • Tends to be aggressive and violent when provoked
  • Superficial relationship with others
  • Aloof and detached
  • Uncomfortable working in groups

 

Q3: The late adopter is a prisoner who wants to reform but

could not reform due to unfavorable environment, for example, he or she is rejected each time he or she applies for a job to earn a decent living.

An inmate who wants to reform but perceives the environment as unfavorable.

The late adopter is marked by the following characteristics:

  • Believes in self to change for the better
  • Readily admits and become apologetic when they make mistakes and willing to learn from them
  • High respect for rules and regulations
  • Respects others’ rights and properties
  • Obeys and carries out prison officer’s instructions
  • Able to take criticisms and reprimands calmly
  • Indecisiveness due to lack of confidence
  • Pragmatic – wants certainties to have a better life
  • Depends on others for help to make up one’s mind
  • Fear of adapting to a new or different environment
  • Moody and erratic
  • Dependent on support from family and society
  • Respond positively to rehabilitation programs
  • Slow in making decision
  • Wants detailed information to ensure self-change is for the better

 

Q4: The hard core is a prisoner who sees the world as rats eating rats with the best transcending the rests. He or she is a psychopath who thinks he or she can outsmart everybody else for his or her survival and to satisfy his or her  dominant needs. He or she  perceives the environment whether it is favorable or unfavorable as unfavorable and has made his or her  mind not to reform.

Below are the behavioral indicators of  the hardcore criminal:

  • Able to behave like a chameleon and conceal their behavior
  • Puts up a mask when interacting and engaging with others
  • A wolf in sheep clothing
  • Cunning, deceptive, complicated and unpredictable
  • Revengeful – know many ways to skin a cat
  • Influential with the ability to get other prisoners to do things their way
  • Good at persuading, convincing mobilizing others to create chaos
  • Able to manipulate and use others to achieve his or her personal motive and agendum
  • Able to wriggle out of a difficult situation
  • Have many skeletons in their closet
  • Able to size people up and treat them like puppets
  • Able to work themselves into the good books of the prison authority
  • Takes calculated risks
  • Is an Egomaniac – believes he or she is always right
  • Knows who, when, where and how to use their resources to wrangle out of their predicaments
  • Possesses an unrecognizable pattern of behavior that varies with the situation and across time