Improving Mental Health in Prisons Through Biophilic Design

Increasing nature and natural elements within a prison offers the potential to destress residents, improve mental health, cognitive functioning and learning; reduce recidivism and increase receptivity for behavioral change and restorative justice opportunities. Biophilic design is outlined as a set...

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Main Authors: Söderlund, J., Newman, Peter
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/59755
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author Söderlund, J.
Newman, Peter
author_facet Söderlund, J.
Newman, Peter
author_sort Söderlund, J.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Increasing nature and natural elements within a prison offers the potential to destress residents, improve mental health, cognitive functioning and learning; reduce recidivism and increase receptivity for behavioral change and restorative justice opportunities. Biophilic design is outlined as a set of principles, attributes and practices for cities to bring nature into urbanites’ daily life. The role of nature in restorative initiatives is traced back to the early work of innovative psychoanalyst, Eric Fromm, illustrating how his framework of human psychological pathways overlaps with biophilic design principles. Together, these approaches should provide new ways to improve the prison experience.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-597552018-07-31T07:04:10Z Improving Mental Health in Prisons Through Biophilic Design Söderlund, J. Newman, Peter Increasing nature and natural elements within a prison offers the potential to destress residents, improve mental health, cognitive functioning and learning; reduce recidivism and increase receptivity for behavioral change and restorative justice opportunities. Biophilic design is outlined as a set of principles, attributes and practices for cities to bring nature into urbanites’ daily life. The role of nature in restorative initiatives is traced back to the early work of innovative psychoanalyst, Eric Fromm, illustrating how his framework of human psychological pathways overlaps with biophilic design principles. Together, these approaches should provide new ways to improve the prison experience. 2017 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/59755 10.1177/0032885517734516 restricted
spellingShingle Söderlund, J.
Newman, Peter
Improving Mental Health in Prisons Through Biophilic Design
title Improving Mental Health in Prisons Through Biophilic Design
title_full Improving Mental Health in Prisons Through Biophilic Design
title_fullStr Improving Mental Health in Prisons Through Biophilic Design
title_full_unstemmed Improving Mental Health in Prisons Through Biophilic Design
title_short Improving Mental Health in Prisons Through Biophilic Design
title_sort improving mental health in prisons through biophilic design
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/59755