Prison Staff as Key Actors in Implementing International Prisoner Rights Standards: A Study from the Sincan Prison Campus (PID155)

1pm – 1.30pm GMT+03:00, 29 October 2025 ‐ 30 mins

Thematic Workshop Sessions

This study, marking the tenth anniversary of the UN Nelson Mandela Rules, explores how Turkish prison staff perceive and approach prisoner rights within international standards. Conducted by Süleyman Kaçmaz and supervised by Prof. Dr. Elif Gökçearslan, the research utilized surveys and focus groups with 111 officers at Ankara’s Sincan Prison Campus. Findings reveal that while most staff support basic human rights and rehabilitation, many believe inmates receive “too many” rights, fostering resentment. Over half of the participants cited staff-related challenges - especially shortages and low job satisfaction - as key barriers to protecting prisoner rights. Officers also criticized past human rights training as ineffective, emphasizing the need for higher-quality education and a rights-oriented institutional culture. The study concludes that safeguarding prisoner welfare, as envisioned by the Mandela Rules, requires parallel investment in staff well-being, training, and support systems. Without improving staff conditions, effective rehabilitation and humane treatment of inmates remain unrealistic goals.
 
Moderated by Dorin Muresan, Chair, Staff Training and Development Network, ICPA