Harsh Judgment: Japan’s Criminal Justice System

Behind Bars in Japan: Fighting to Improve Prison Conditions and Inmate Treatment

Society

Japan’s prison population has steadily declined since reaching a peak of 70,000 in 2006; at the end of 2016, it was below 50,000. However, recidivism rates still remain high. Lawyer and activist Tagusari Maiko shares insight about the Japanese penal system.

Tagusari Maiko

Attorney and head of NPO Center for Prisoners’ Rights. Earned her law degree from the University of Tokyo. Joined the Daini Tokyo Bar Association in 1995. Received her PhD in law from Hitotsubashi University in 2016. Works include Koritsu suru Nihon no shikei (Japan Isolated in Its Approach to Capital Punishment).

Fears of Backsliding

INTERVIEWER What is behind the claims that Japan has a high recidivism rate?

TAGUSARI  There’s a perception that prison is a revolving door, with convicts ending up right back behind bars soon after release. The figures paint a different picture, though. The number of people imprisoned in Japan has steadily fallen for more than a decade. The rate of decline among first-time offenders has outpaced that for reoffenders, though, pushing the ratio of repeat offenders in the prison population higher and making it seem like recidivism is on the rise.

Although statistics show that Japanese society is becoming safer, the Ministry of Justice has used the recidivism rate to stoke fears among the public and legislators in a bid to cut itself a larger slice of the budgetary pie. The major news outlets have mostly gone along with the ruse by running one sensational story after another, making it seem like there is a public safety crisis. In reality, though, the exact opposite is the case.

This is not to say that the government hasn’t tried to reduce recidivism. Back in 2012, it announced plans to lower the number of prisoners who return to jail within two years of release by twenty percent over the coming decade. While the rate did fall, to achieve quick results authorities focused primarily on prisoners with short criminal histories who had the best chance of being rehabilitated.

Concentrating on low-risk inmates neglect the prisoners who are most in need of programs to help keep them from backsliding. The fact of the matter is that prisons abound with inmates who suffer emotional, cognitive, or physical problems that make it hard for them to readjust to life on the outside. This includes mental illness, the growing hordes of elderly prisoners, and detainees who lack adequate communication or problem-solving skills or who after years in jail have become institutionalized. These inmates are most in need of programs to teach them to navigate society and avoid the hazards and pitfalls that landed them in jail in the first place.

This is not to say that rehabilitation programs are ineffectual or nonexistent. It’s just that prison budgets are stretched and officials prefer to make the most of the funds, which means focusing on the prisoners least likely to reoffend. This is not likely to change unless the Justice Ministry takes the initiative to support programs focused on the highest‑risk and highest‑need inmates.

Improving Medical Treatment Behind Bars

INTERVIEWER  Many experts have pointed to the sad state of medical care as the biggest issue prisons face. Have recent reforms improved the situation?

TAGUSARI  A large portion of the 1,000 or so grievances we receive at the Center for Prisoners’ Rights each year concern medical care. Going from these, it would be fair to characterize Japan’s prison healthcare system as lagging woefully behind international standards for the humane treatment of inmates. Although the Justice Ministry is aware there are major shortcomings, it has struggled to come up with measures that significantly improve the situation.

In particular, there’s a dire shortage of medical doctors on staff at correctional institutions. The Justice Ministry, despite its best efforts, has failed to make much progress in wooing physicians, and most posts remain unfilled. The prison reform bill tries to ameliorate the issue to a degree with provisions like one allowing inmates to request an outside doctor for their care. The measure is hardly ever used, though. It is hard to understand why patients in civil society should be able to request an in-home doctor visit, but a person behind bars can’t.

The incredibly strict, almost excessive, security at Japanese prisons is a huge part of the problem. Officials try to limit the number of nonstaff individuals coming into the prison to an absolute bare minimum and are also extremely reluctant to allow a prisoner to visit a physician on the outside because of the risks involved. While they prefer that inmates visit the staff doctor, even this is an added burden to already stretched staff as correctional officers must escort prisoners. This has made prison authorities increasingly reluctant to grant inmate medical requests.

Emergency Measures Needed

Most correctional facilities have a nurse’s aide on staff who determines whether an inmate’s condition merits seeing a doctor. Although the prison law stipulates that inmates are to receive prompt medical treatment, officials often deny requests to consult a medical doctor on arbitrary grounds. Prisoners are able to report such abuses of authority, but frequently stay quiet or conceal medical conditions to avoid causing a stir that might affect their prospects for an early release. Prison officials like to point to the lack of grievances filed as proof that inmates are being treated humanely, but this is not necessarily the case. There are plenty of examples of sick or injured prisoners who took a sudden turn for the worse after they were denied the chance to consult a doctor by a nurse’s aide or because of understaffing.

Prison officials must of course balance security with the medical needs of inmates. However, when the two come in direct conflict, all too frequently it is the health of prisoners that takes a backseat. What the government really needs to do is transfer oversight of prison medical care from the Justice Ministry to the more appropriate Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare. There are steps that should be taken to improve the situation in the interim, though, like setting up pilot programs at prisons to outsource medical care to private physicians.

Rethinking Prisons

INTERVIEWER  How do you think prisons should change going forward?

TAGUSARI  Japan views incarceration as a last resort for people who break the law. But there are still far too many individuals behind bars, particularly repeat offenders. Many legal experts argue that stricter penalties are needed for recidivists, but this type of no-tolerance approach ensnares everyone in the same net, assuring that even perpetrators of low-level offenses are thrown behind bars. Japan has no need to enforce such strict interpretation of criminal law and must strive for a more balanced approach.

Japan could look overseas for ideas. The trend in incarceration internationally is toward small-scale prisons that are easier to staff and are better able to care for the needs of inmates. By comparison, Japan is heavily invested in large facilities housing diverse inmate populations. The government will need time to gradually downsize prisons, but in the meantime, given proper staffing and budget levels, authorities could make a range of improvements, such as by reorganizing prison populations into a mixture of minimum- to maximum-security units.

The UN Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners state that prisoners should be treated with the respect and dignity due their inherent value as human beings and that the safety and security of prisoners, staff, service providers, and visitors shall be ensured at all times. Moving toward this ideal would enable the prison system to better support inmates and give them a sense of dignity as members of society. Looking at Japanese society, though, this ideal has yet to gain a foothold among regular people or the authorities charged with reforming the system. Overcoming the countless hurdles to achieving a balanced approach to criminal justice will require dedication and persistence among all parties going forward.

(Originally published in Japanese. Interview by Takahashi Yuki of Power News. Interview photos by Ikazaki Shinobu. Banner photo: A corridor at the former Nara Prison, photographed in July 2017. Built in 1908, the facility remained in use for more than a century, most recently housing juvenile offenders until 2017. © Jiji.)

Related Tags

crime law justice

Other articles in this report