2 job vacancies at RMT - 1) Bar Person, Doncaster 2) Solicitor (5 years PQE)

 

2 job vacancies at Unite the Union - Organisers and Organisers in Training

 

1 job vacancy at the Morning Star - Subeditor

 

The Morning Star Shop - Online now

 

Donate to the Morning Star Fighting Fund

Subscribe to the Morning Star Mailing List

Progressive Web Listings

Read about EDM 1334

 

 

The Morning Star on Twitter Friends of the Morning Star on Facebook

 

Ken Gill Memorial Fund

 

Revolting Europe - London-based writer, journalist and regular Morning Star contributor Tom Gill focuses on developments in the European left, trade union and social movements

 



 

The Way I See It

The shipyard painter, political activist and razor-sharp cartoonist Bob Starrett has just written a new book The Way I See It on his eventful life and times. Below we reprint one of his stories and review an essential read

La Boheme

ENO's production of La Boheme is a triumph,

No Easy Time

Directed by Will Woodward
Wednesday 20 October 2010

With over 85,000 people currently locked up, Britain has the largest prison population in western Europe. Britain's Drug Policy Commission estimates that a third to a half of new inmates are problem drug users.

Of these the lucky ones get into a "TC" - a unique therapeutic community run by prisoners to help with their drug addition.

Prison officers are present to supervise but the day-to-day regime tends to be more relaxed than other prisons and all the jobs and therapy are carried out by the prisoners themselves.

No Easy Time is a 30-minute documentary looking at the therapeutic community unit in Channings Wood prison in Devon. The film focuses on three prisoners - 23-year-old Tim, former football hooligan and heroin addict Carl and Matt who is about to leave prison.

The Prison Reform Trust recently released a report noting that children who ended up in custody are "doubly punished" because they are far more likely to come from disadvantaged backgrounds.

The three protagonists in No Easy Time conform closely to these findings, with Tim having been in and out of jail since he was 13 after being brought up by a drug addict. Meanwhile, Matt explains that he grew up in care and has been taking drugs since he was 11.

During one therapy session Tim is brutally told that the five children he has fathered are all getting on well without him and that he "isn't needed."

After another tough session, Carl gives the film its title by admitting: "Getting told about yourself, when you know it is 75 per cent true or 100 per cent, anybody's going to feel uncomfortable ... I wanted the world to gobble me up."

Living in Torquay since his release, at the film's close Matt fails a drug test and a return to prison looms. Other than this, no other evidence of the success or failure of therapeutic communities is provided.

However, the real success story - and only something this reviewer fully comprehended on his second viewing - is the prisoners who provide the group therapy.

So focused was I on the emotional struggles of the three main prisoners that I missed those confidently leading the in-depth and honest discussions that confronted individuals about their past behaviour.

This confusion may be partly down to the film's direction which is perhaps a little unstructured and low on explanation at times.

Yet Will Woodward has picked a fascinating and important subject that deserves further investigation.

With their self-governing, deinstitutionalised philosophy and their peer review and collaborative approach, therapeutic communities offer a progressive alternative to the rest of our heaving prison system.

No Easy Time certainly shows the prisoners taking control of, and responsibility for, their own actions and lives.

But whether therapeutic communities are actually successful in reducing reoffending is something viewers will have to research themselves.

No Easy Time is showing at the Sheffield Doc/Fest on November 4 and November 6. For more information visit www.sheffdocfest.com

If you appreciated this article then please consider donating to the Morning Star's Fighting Fund to ensure we can keep developing your paper.

Donate to the Fighting Fund here