![]() (a) The term “chief executive officer of the facility” means the correctional official with command authority over a particular correctional facility. 2010)Ĭorrectional agencies, facilities, staff, and prisoners Standards on Treatment of Prisoners (Text)ĪBA Criminal Justice Standards on Treatment of Prisoners (Approved by ABA House of Delegates, Feb. Standard 23-11.5 Media access to correctional facilities and prisoners Standard 23-11.4 Legislative oversight and accountability Standard 23-11.3 External monitoring and inspection Standard 23-11.2 External regulation and investigation Standard 23-10.5 Privately operated correctional facilities Part XI: Accountability and Oversight Standard 23-10.2 Personnel policy and practice Standard 23-9.5 Access to legal materials and information Part X: Administration and Staffing Standard 23-9.4 Access to legal and consular services Standard 23-9.3 Judicial review of prisoner complaints Standard 23-9.2 Access to the judicial process Standard 23-8.9 Transition to the community Part IX: Grievances and Access to Courts Standard 23-8.8 Fees and financial obligations Standard 23-7.11 Prisoners as subjects of behavioral or biomedical research Part VIII: Rehabilitation and Reintegration Standard 23-7.10 Cross-gender supervision Standard 23-7.9 Searches of prisoners’ bodies Standard 23-7.7 Records and confidentiality Standard 23-7.5 Communication and expression Standard 23-7.2 Prisoners with disabilities and other special needs Standard 23-6.15 Involuntary mental health treatment and transfer Part VII: Personal Dignity Standard 23-6.14 Voluntary and informed consent to treatment Standard 23-6.13 Prisoners with gender identity disorder Standard 23-6.12 Prisoners with chronic or communicable diseases Standard 23-6.11 Services for prisoners with mental disabilities Standard 23-6.9 Pregnant prisoners and new mothers Standard 23-6.8 Health care records and confidentiality Standard 23-6.6 Adequate facilities, equipment, and resources Standard 23-6.4 Qualified health care staff Standard 23-6.3 Control and distribution of prescription drugs Standard 23-6.2 Response to prisoner health care needs Standard 23-6.1 General principles governing health care Standard 23-5.9 Use of restraint mechanisms and techniques Part VI: Health Care Standard 23-5.8 Use of chemical agents, electronic weaponry, and canines Standard 23-5.5 Protection of vulnerable prisoners Standard 23-5.4 Self-harm and suicide prevention Standard 23-5.2 Prevention and investigation of violence Standard 23-5.1 Personal security and protection from harm Standard 23-4.3 Disciplinary sanctions Part V: Personal Security Standard 23-4.2 Disciplinary hearing procedures Standard 23-4.1 Rules of conduct and informational handbook Standard 23-3.9 Conditions during lockdown Part IV: Rules of Conduct and Discipline Standard 23-3.7 Restrictions relating to programming and privileges Standard 23-3.6 Recreation and out-of-cell time Standard 23-3.2 Conditions for special types of prisoners Standard 23-3.1 Physical plant and environmental conditions Standard 23-2.9 Procedures for placement and retention in long-term segregated housing Part III: Conditions of Confinement Standard 23-2.8 Segregated housing and mental health Standard 23-2.7 Rationales for long-term segregated housing Standard 23-2.6 Rationales for segregated housing Standard 23-2.4 Special classification issues Standard 23-2.3 Classification procedures ![]() Standard 23-1.2 Treatment of prisoners Part II: Intake and Classification Standard 23-1.1 General principles governing imprisonment To go to a particular “black letter” Standard (without commentary), click on the relevant Standard in the Table of Contents, below. This Standards can also be purchased in a book format. For a pdf version of the publication, Click Here. The “black letter” Standards and accompanying commentary have been published in ABA Standards for Criminal Justice: Treatment of Prisoners, Third Edition © 2011, American Bar Association. These Standards supplant the previous ABA Criminal Justice Standards on the Legal Status of Prisoners and, in addition, new Standard 23-6.15 supplants Standards 7-10.2 and 7-10.5 through 7-10.9 of the ABA Criminal Justice Mental Health Standards. In February 2010, the ABA House of Delegates approved a set of ABA Criminal Justice Standards on Treatment of Prisoners.
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