Concept and purpose The purpose of the penal system is defined in of the Strafvollzugsgesetz (StVG). In Austria, the penal system is not based on retribution but on the principle of resocialisation. Prisoners are to be made aware during their imprisonment that their actions were wrong and reprehensible. In this sense, the fundamental idea of the Austrian penal system is the reintegration of offenders into society. The isolation of prisoners is primarily carried out for this purpose and to maintain security and order within the Justizanstalt. This is defined in para. 2 StVG. Total isolation without prospect of parole, as sometimes practised in
supermax prisons in the
United States, contradicts the self-conception of the Austrian penal system.
Grounds and types of detention In Austria, eight different types of detention are distinguished. Not all of these are served in Justizanstalten (which include penal institutions, court prisons, and special facilities); some are carried out in police station holding cells or in Police Detention Centres (
Polizeianhaltezentren). •
Verwahrungshaft is a provisional detention lasting a maximum of 48 hours in a police cell when there is reasonable suspicion of a criminal offence, until transfer to pre-trial detention. •
Untersuchungshaft (pre-trial detention) is a form of detention for persons suspected of a criminal offence; it may last up to two years or until the start of the main criminal trial. It is served in court prisons (
gerichtliche Gefangenenhäuser). •
Strafhaft (custodial sentence) arises from a court judgment or as a substitute custodial sentence for uncollectible fines. It is served either in a court prison or in a penal institution. •
Unterbringung in a Forensic-Therapeutic Centre is a preventive measure involving deprivation of liberty, ordered in addition to any custodial sentence and served in the justice system’s forensic-therapeutic centres. • Administrative punitive detention (
Verwaltungsstrafhaft) lasting from 12 hours to 6 weeks may be imposed for administrative offences or for uncollectible administrative fines. It is usually served in Police Detention Centres. • Police detention (
Polizeiliche Haft) is a provisional detention lasting a maximum of 24 hours in a police cell in connection with proceedings for an administrative offence. • Aliens police detention (
Fremdenpolizeiliche Haft) is the immediate placement of persons in police cells pending appearance before the aliens police authority. •
Schubhaft is the detention of persons scheduled for
deportation under the Aliens Police Act 2005, for a maximum of 18 months, in a Police Detention Centre.
Special features of the penal system Judicial assistance for Liechtenstein Under the
Treaty between the Republic of Austria and the Principality of Liechtenstein on the Accommodation of Prisoners, sentences imposed by
Liechtenstein courts are served in Austrian Justizanstalten. Because the Principality of Liechtenstein previously had no penal institutions of its own, all prisoners from the microstate were transferred to the Austrian justice system for the duration of their sentence and accommodated in Austrian prisons. Liechtenstein now has its own National Prison (
Landesgefängnis) with 20 places, which for a time also accepted prisoners serving sentences of less than two years. However, because the Liechtenstein National Prison no longer met international standards, a 2017
memorandum of understanding between the Liechtenstein and Austrian governments provided that all convicted prisoners and persons subject to preventive measures would again be transferred to the Austrian justice system. This is possible only if the prisoner was convicted of an act that is also punishable in Austria and the length of the sentence does not exceed the maximum provided for under Austrian law. In addition, the prisoners must not have been convicted of political or tax offences. The treaty was signed on 4 June 1982 by the then Austrian Minister of Justice,
Christian Broda, and the Liechtenstein Head of Government,
Hans Brunhart. The instruments of ratification were exchanged on 9 June 1983 between Austrian Federal President
Rudolf Kirchschläger (countersigned by Federal Chancellor
Fred Sinowatz) and Prince
Franz Joseph II of Liechtenstein. The judicial assistance agreement entered into force on 1 September 1983. In 2012, 15 Liechtenstein prisoners serving a total of 4,338 prison days were accommodated in Austrian penal institutions. This corresponded to just under 25 per cent of the total capacity utilisation of the Liechtenstein National Prison.
Prison decongestion programme In the summer of 2007, the then Minister of Justice
Maria Berger proposed a prison decongestion programme to relieve overcrowding in Austrian prisons. The programme provided, among other things, that persons sentenced to a substitute custodial sentence for unpaid fines would not have to serve the prison term but could instead perform community service. The motto of the initiative, coined by the Minister, was "Sweat instead of sit" (
Schwitzen statt Sitzen). Further elements of the package included expanding conditional release by abolishing the general-prevention requirement for release after two-thirds of the sentence, increased use of directives and probation assistance, waiving execution of a custodial sentence in exchange for deportation and a re-entry ban, and the introduction of
electronic monitoring (ankle monitors) in the Austrian penal system. The Minister countered critics by stating that she did not expect many convicted persons to take up the programme; rather, she anticipated an increase in the number of people who would pay their fines after all in order to avoid the "threat" of community work. According to Berger, the measures were intended to free up as many as 10,000 prison places. On 7 November 2007 the cabinet approved the bill and forwarded it to the
National Council, which passed it together with a series of other legislative amendments on 5 December. The new decongestion package entered into force on 1 January 2008. Due to the severe overcrowding of Austrian prisons, the first conditional releases under the new rules began shortly after the law took effect. In a July 2008 press release summarising her tenure, Minister Berger described the decongestion programme as a complete success. Average prison occupancy fell from 8,850–9,100 in 2007 to as low as 8,044 in early July 2008. At the same time, the number of conditional releases rose from 923 in the first half of 2007 and 845 in the second half to 1,584 in the first half of 2008. In the same period, 152 non-Austrian prisoners from 30 countries made use of the newly created option of leaving the country in lieu of serving their sentence, combined with a re-entry ban.
Justice Support Agency In April 2008 it became known that the Federal Ministry of Justice planned to outsource a narrowly defined part of penal-system tasks to a private company. With the newly created
Justizbetreuungsagentur (Justice Support Agency), it was intended to make it easier to employ specialist doctors and psychologists in prisons via the agency. The trigger for this rethink was the sharply rising costs of caring for persons detained under preventive measures for mentally abnormal offenders. Since the Ministry could no longer meet the increased need for specialist staff with its own budgeted positions, doctors and psychologists were to be employed under private-law contracts through the agency in future. Criticism came primarily from the Austrian Court of Audit (
Rechnungshof), the
Austrian Ombudsman Board (
Volksanwaltschaft), the staff representation of non-uniformed justice employees, and the Green justice spokesperson in the National Council, Albert Steinhauser. In particular, there were fears of a loss of quality in care. According to the Ministry, the criticism was examined and the draft law revised accordingly. On 14 May the final bill was submitted to the National Council and adopted on 5 June. The
Justizbetreuungsagentur-Gesetz thereby entered into force.
Electronic monitoring Electronic monitoring, colloquially known as the
electronic ankle monitor or "ankle bracelet", is an option for mitigating sentences in the Austrian penal system. It has been legally available since 1 September 2010. This form of detention allows the prisoner to remain at home under house arrest while being monitored by an electronic device. Its primary purpose is to relieve pressure on prisons while preventing complete detachment from the offender’s social and professional environment, which also benefits resocialisation. Persons subject to preventive measures (
Maßnahmenvollzug) are generally excluded. For
sex offenders, approval is made more difficult or impossible by requiring an expert opinion. == Types of Justizanstalten ==