Words matter: A call for humanizing and respectful language to describe people who experience incarceration

Nguyen Toan Tran*, Stéphanie Baggio, Angela Dawson, Éamonn O'Moore, Brie Williams, Precious Bedell, Olivier Simon, Willem Scholten, Laurent Getaz, Hans Wolff

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    65 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Background: Words matter when describing people involved in the criminal justice system because language can have a significant impact upon health, wellbeing, and access to health information and services. However, terminology used in policies, programs, and research publications is often derogatory, stigmatizing, and dehumanizing. Discussion: In response, health experts from Europe, the United States, and Australia recommend that healthcare professionals, researchers, and policy makers working with people in detention follow key principles that foster constructive and humanizing language. These principles include: engage people and respect their preferences; use stigma-free and accurate language; prioritize individuals over their characteristics; and cultivate self-awareness. The article offers examples of problematic terms to be avoided because they do not convey respect for incarcerated people and propose preferred wording which requires contextualization to local language, culture, and environment. Conclusion: The use of respectful and appropriate language is a cornerstone of reducing harm and suffering when working with people involved in the criminal justice system; the use of stigmatizing and dehumanizing language must therefore come to an end.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number41
    JournalBMC International Health and Human Rights
    Volume18
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 16 Nov 2018

    Bibliographical note

    Publisher Copyright:
    © 2018 The Author(s).

    Keywords

    • Access
    • Discrimination
    • Harm reduction
    • Health in prisons
    • Human rights
    • Incarceration
    • Stigma
    • Terminology

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