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Substance use and abuse in Guyana’s prisons: self-medication by inmates

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posted on 2022-05-17, 11:14 authored by Clare AndersonClare Anderson

The ‘Survey of Individuals Deprived of Liberty: Caribbean 2016-2019’ produced for the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) across six Caribbean countries – including Guyana – highlights the conditions of prisons, the characteristics of inmates in prisons, the factors behind their incarceration, the judicial processes leading to their convictions, and inmates’ perspectives of re-entry into society. One theme that emerges across these aspects of Caribbean prison worlds is substance use, both prior to incarceration and within prison walls. For example, the study illustrates that individuals who use drugs and/or alcohol before committing a criminal offence have higher levels of recidivism than those who did not consume such substances. This observation suggests, as does the international literature on drug treatment programmes during custody, that substance misuse is a risk factor in criminal recidivism.

Funding

MNS Disorders in Guyana's Jails, 1825 to the present day Economic and Social Research Council

History

Citation

In the Diaspora, Stabroek News, May 3, 2021

Author affiliation

School of History, Politics and International Relations

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

In the Diaspora

Publisher

Stabroek News

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2022-05-17

Notes

Archived with permission from the publisher.

Language

en

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