Main Themes can be categorized into Four broad themes
emerged from the data:
Inmates
benefits
1. Therapeutic
Responses: Reduced inmate’s stressors of being in jail; increased inmates’
patience; increase inmate’s sense of community purpose.
2. Job
Skills: Increase potential inmate employability in work with animals, increase
inmate’s knowledge of animal training skills for personal usage with work with
own/family animals.
Canine
benefits
Shelter dog's obedience training making them more
adoptable; dogs’ service training skills make them more adoptable; increased
adoptions of shelter dogs and decreased chances for euthanasia.
Prison
facility benefits
Improves inmates’ satisfaction with doing prison time
reducing problem behaviour; increases the inmates' visibility and appreciation
by the community; increases positive communication between prison staff and
inmates.
Inmates
recommendations for changes in the paws and stripes program
No Dogs Should is Returned to the Shelter: “Stop dogs
not adopted from having to be returned to the shelter”; expand on dog training
schedules making them more evenly distributed; and allows dogs to be housed
with inmates to increase social skills in the canines.
Inmate
Perceptions (participants’ surveys were anonymous to maintain confidentiality)
The survey questionnaire exposed the positive
influence and importance of a rehabilitative program for incarcerated inmates.
Every survey collected and reviewed disclosed 100% that inmates felt the
experience they received from the Paws and Stripes program positively changed
their lives. The participants expressed they felt more confident in their
abilities and communication skills to be able to live more productively in
society. In addition, they convened their opinions of the value this program
had on the community. By taking animals that were essentially unadoptable from
the humane society and teaching them basic obedience skills, it created a more
socially compatible pet that was more prone to be adopted. The Paws and Stripes
Program was seen by the participants as a win-win situation for both society
and incarcerated inmates.
Findings
Direct quotes from Inmates: (no participants’ names
were known to the researchers to further protect the inmates’ confidentiality).
1. “Maybe
I’ll try to get a job in this area of work. Train and handle my dog correctly.
Talk to people about their dogs, teach them what I have learned”.
2. “The
many times I have visited shelters I would always think to myself how cool it
would be to work with animals, especially those in need of love and proper
attention. Now I feel that with all the knowledge I have I would qualify for a
job handling the animals.”
3. “This
program has absolutely changed my life. I have learned to love myself and other
people, realizing none of us are perfect and if we fail, we pick you up and try
again. I have developed patience and tolerance a willingness to overcome them. I
have learned to be victorious rather than defeated.”
4. “Yes,
Paws and Stripes is therapeutic, spending time with the dogs affected me and
the dogs in a positive way. Making a difference in the lives of people that
need our dogs, once they get adopted helped to give me self-confidence”.
5. “Having
a program like this is such an asset to the community. These dogs become
helpers and healers and it’s really amazing to see them get matched up with a
person who needs them. It helps the dogs to.”
6. “Initially
I was apprehensive about training the dogs because they have such important
jobs to do. I was nervous about messing up their training, but Deputy Fay (Mrs.
Muller) & Corporal Lamp helped to ease my nervousness and teach me in a
respectful way which gave me confidence to train”.
7. “Dogs
shouldn’t get sent back to the shelter because they didn’t have anyone looking
to adopt them, we should just continue to train the dog”.
8. “Bitter
sweet, because I’m happy they found a home, but sad at the same time because I
get attached to them”.
Participants’ responses regarding their experiences
with the Paws and Stripes College program results indicated that this
particular inmate animal prison program provided therapeutic benefits to the
inmates by improving their time spent in jail due to reducing stressors such as
boredom, depression, and anxiety. The program was instrumental in increasing
the inmate's confidence and improving their communication skills through a
self-expressed sense of purpose, and perceived job enhancement through the
development of employable skills (canine training, grooming, and animal
behaviour). The inmates also developed skills not just limited to canine
training, but skills that would help them adjust to the outside world through
expansion of responsible behaviour, patience and empathetic caring toward another
living entity. Most importantly, the inmates learned to respect themselves and
others while building trust, confidence and independence in both canines and
humans.
The participants in this study discussed difficulties
functioning within their prison environment with regard to both coping and
communication skills. The Paws and Stripes College program appeared to help the
participants become more conscious of, and more mindful of their various
emotions. Through learning how to process and manage their emotions during
their work in animal training, the inmates were better able to effectively
utilize appropriate interpersonal and communication skills. In turn, the
inmates’ felt this made them more compassionate and successful trainers while
helping to approach and resolve conflict within their daily interactions with
staff and each other. In addition, all nine participants discussed the value of
learning to work together with an animal in order to achieve successful
alternative outcomes. In particular, several participants discussed the
benefits of spending time with different canines, as they felt this helped them
learn to understand and interact with different personalities and challenges.
Inmates expressed feeling that working with different
breeds and temperaments of canines helped them learn to interact with people
with different personalities in their families and within the current prison
environment.
The participants noted that humans can be judgmental,
and many times they are judged for being incarcerated. The inmates expressed
that although they had committed crimes, that the majority of people do not
understand the individual situations that led them to committing a criminal
act. The inmates reported the Paws and Stripes College program environment and
the presence of a non-judgmental animal provided them a sense of security,
allowing for self-exploration of their behaviors and choices in life which
ultimately affected their understanding of themselves and of others.