Dan Pacholke: How prisons can help inmates live meaningful lives
Den Pačolki (Dan Pacholke): Kako zatvori mogu pomoći zatvorenicima da vode smislene živote
Dan Pacholke aims to keep the Washington State Department of Corrections on the front edge of innovation by rethinking the design of prisons, the training of officers and the education opportunities made available to inmates. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
the bucket for failed social policy.
nothing else has worked,
po glavi stanovnika,
za vreme ropstva 1850.
u ovoj zemlji.
Department of Corrections.
razmišljamo o korekcijama.
in corrections, over 30 years.
preko 30 godina, u Korekcijama.
going to end up in prison,
kao što ih vidite
koji je imao pet spratova.
zatvorenim prostorima.
izbacivano iz svojih ćelija.
iz svojih ćelija.
I started as an officer there.
jednim od tih ćelijskih blokova
u našem centru za primanje,
roiling from the parking lot,
kako dolaze sa parkinga,
to je bio naš posao.
da bismo mogli
were most violent or disruptive
contact and they deteriorate.
društveni kontakt, postaće gori.
Odeljka za intenzivno upravljanje
of the state's deep-end prisons
u jednom od onih zatvora
or disruptive inmates are housed.
problematičniji zatvorenici.
reagovanje u nezgodama.
experienced correctional workers
dva iskusna zatvorska radnika
kako da ih sprečiš?"
neke nove ideje
naše čuvare u timovima,
at a time to the state training academy.
na državnu akademiju.
sa šegrtskim modelom,
sa veteranima.
odgovarajući na njega.
we tried a new type of design.
probali smo novu vrstu dizajna.
significant to you here today,
za ćeliju bez toaleta.
način na koji radimo.
da dolaze u kontakt
i intervenisati
safer and more humane.
sigurnija i humanija.
koju sam video dotad.
and we changed the behavior.
i promenili smo ponašanje.
da nisam naučio lekciju,
up against system change.
pravo na promenu sistema.
zatvorski sistem.
on my earlier experiences
o svojim ranijim iskustvima
u interakciju sa prestupnicima,
with offenders, the heat went down.
the behavior changed.
menjalo se ponašanje.
superintendent of a small prison.
people who were not like me,
različitim od sebe,
i dolazili iz različitih profesija.
ugroženih vrsta:
prerijskih biljaka.
organskog bilja, recikliranja.
do mnogih projekata
other state systems as well,
menja naš rad.
more interesting and exciting.
moj posao zanimljivijim.
kažnjavanje ili praštanje,
čak i u zatvoru.
dobre i smislene živote,
violent offenders are housed.
sa najnasilnijim zatvorenicima.
intenzivno upravljanje
kao što je programiranje.
was these particular inmates.
potrebno programiranje.
intenzivno programiranje.
za 180 stepeni
za kažnjavanje,
odgovornost da kontrolišemo,
komuniciraju bezbedno, licem u lice
više nije bila problem,
na druge stvari,
i ono što je moguće,
what was possible, and this gives me hope.
for both staff and inmates,
i za osoblje i za zatvorenike,
a lot more than just controlling.
u nešto više od kontrole.
naš konačni cilj,
da smanje zločine,
and environmental restoration.
i obnove okoline.
10 do 20 godina da otkrijemo
velika promena sistema.
dana ili meseci, a ne godina.
za merenje uticaja
in old ideas about prison.
pri starim idejama o zatvoru.
Možemo to da stvorimo.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Dan Pacholke - Prison administrator and reformerDan Pacholke aims to keep the Washington State Department of Corrections on the front edge of innovation by rethinking the design of prisons, the training of officers and the education opportunities made available to inmates.
Why you should listen
Dan Pacholke has spent more than three decades working in prisons, first as a corrections office and later as an administrator. Now the Deputy Secretary of Operations for the Washington State Department of Corrections, he says, “I don’t see my job as to punish or forgive [inmates], but I do think they can have decent and meaningful lives in prison.”
Pacholke has dedicated his career to changing the way we think about corrections. Over the years, he has helped usher in programs designed to prevent fires before they start rather than fight them after they’ve flared up. Pacholke has been part of initiatives to redesign prison facilities to maximize interaction between the staff and inmates, to give corrections officers training in verbal de-escalation as well as physical response, and to give inmates opportunities to learn new things while they are in the system. As the co-director of the Sustainability in Prisons Project, Pacholke brought recycling, composting, horticulture and even bee-keeping programs into prisons—to give inmates meaningful work, but also to cut costs and make prisons more sustainable.
Dan Pacholke | Speaker | TED.com