Finland believes incarceration should be about rehabilitation.
Like many other Nordic and Scandinavian countries, Finland has a progressive criminal-justice system.
One hallmark of the system is the open prison. In 2020, BI reported that inmates in open prisons live in dormitories, come and go in their own cars, and have access to education programs.
"We have this kind of normality principle that prisoners should be treated equally even though they are prisoners, but they should have access to same services and rights as other citizens," Pia Puolakka, the project manager for Finland's Smart Prison Project, said.
Open prisons are part of Finland's Criminal Sanctions Agency's strategy to reduce the chances of re-offending, or recidivism.
A 2022 report by the agency found that among people released from prison in 2017, 58% committed another offense within the following five years — though the agency noted that COVID-19 did impact court proceedings for part of that time. The recidivism rate was 37% in 2017 for prisoners with one previous sentence, down by five percentage points from 2016, the agency reported.
In the US in 2019, Prison Legal News reported that a 2018 report by the US Department of Justice found that almost 45% of prisoners released in 2005 were arrested again within a year and that 83% had been rearrested in nine years. Their findings did not denote how many sentences those with repeat arrests had received.
Finland generally has a much lower incarceration rate than the US, with 51 per 100,000 people incarcerated compared to 531 per 100,000, World Prison Brief reported.