Correctional Centres Reform for Family and Conjugal Rights: Best Practices and Future Directions

This paper examines the need for correctional centre reform, focusing on family and conjugal rights, analysing global best practices, and exploring future directions for reform. The right to family life and procreation is acknowledged in various international and regional human rights laws. However, the extent of this right for incarcerated individuals remains contested and inconsistently applied. Conjugal visits, often restricted in prison systems globally, are a central aspect of this right, recognised in some nations as a crucial element of rehabilitation and family cohesion, yet dismissed as a privilege in others. By examining the policies and outcomes in countries that permit conjugal visits, such as Saudi Arabia and some selected states in the United States, this paper evaluates the impact on inmates’ mental health, recidivism, and reintegration. The analysis includes a comparative review of legal frameworks, addressing how reforms in conjugal rights and family visitation policies contribute to rehabilitation goals, reduce violence within prison facilities, and improve post-incarceration social outcomes. This paper argues that recognising the family and conjugal rights of incarcerated individuals aligns with the objectives of the criminal justice system, reforming individuals, and promoting public safety through successful reintegration. By synthesising current data, theories, and practices, this paper provides a foundation for policymakers, human rights advocates, and legal scholars to consider family rights as a pivotal component in the evolution of correctional policies worldwide.

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