Prison abolition in practice
The Marxist view on crime is that first, it is defined by law which is itself a temporary necessity, and second, crime is primarily influenced by our material and social environment.
In capitalism, policing has to be divorced from the masses, happening from "outside" their natural self-organizing and even "above" it. On the other hand, formal law begins to slowly disintegrate the moment the great majority of people become rulers.
Source: This Soviet World (1936) by Anna Louise Strong
Either way, it's an observable fact that economic upheavals are followed by waves of poverty, addiction, violence. A single person might find ways to stay afloat but scaling up such prevention and help requires action on a massive scale - in other words, it requires altering the social environment.
"Soviet justice therefore aims to give the criminal a new environment," summarizes Strong.
To understand how significant that is, think of how deep-rooted the concept of justice by punishment is in European cultures. Here's a revealing interaction between French colonizers and a Montagnais group in today's Canada:
Source: Myths of Male Dominance (1981) by Eleanor Burke Leacock
The Soviet conception of justice, in my opinion, echoes that sentiment, "give us presents for this wound."
Strong recounts stories of village courts most commonly sentencing people to "do without pay some socially useful work":
In serious cases, the perpetrator is exiled from the village for months or years. But that does not mean imprisoned, nor does it mean letting them off the hook and simply sending them to another town.
The old prisons were being rapidly replaced with much more humane "labor camps", where instead of prison cells and prison guards, the exiled community members would lead a normal life, most often work a normal job with normal pay, and gain skills and friendships.
If you enjoy looking at Scandinavian prison cells with sofas and TVs, the natural progression is no prison cells at all. Normal labor laws applied to workers, families would visit and even live with inmates, libraries and theaters would be built for them, they could marry in the camp and live with their spouses:
Inmates were able to speak candidly and criticize the administration like in any town. Strong had personally visited several such camps and had to conclude that the camps intended to "establish the atmosphere of normal constructive life".
"From 1929 to 1934 sentences for murder decreased by one-half while sex crimes fell off to one-fourth."
Personally, I think these statements are too unsubstantiated, that the need to exile people so directly correlates with growing quality of life.
Additionally, while life in the camps was more or less normal, it was still rough given the conditions of the early Soviet Union in general. Manual labor was ruining people's health, some died of disease. There was a wave of prisoner executions in 1938. Still, it was an improvement from before (note: couldn't find a better chart given my time constraints):
Source: https://reddit.com/r/communism/comments/bkaq89 Sources on the chart also listed in alt text
Soviet experience with prison reform gives ample examples of positive policies beyond the negative "abolish prisons" slogan. If this is an area of interest for you, there are more sources in the comments under that reddit post with the chart.















