Column: California to transform infamous San Quentin prison with Scandinavian ideas, rehab focus

Luis, an inmate at the Pennsylvania State Correctional Institution in Chester, Pa., credits the “Little Scandinavia” unit with giving him a chance of success on the outside by offering him the dignity and opportunity to figure himself out.

(Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times)

Luis went to prison on a life sentence 16 years ago, at age 17. Food came on a tray and leftovers were removed on the same brown plastic rectangle.

So he had never cooked or done dishes before moving to the “Little Scandinavia” unit in the Pennsylvania State Correctional Institution at Chester last year — an experiment modeled after Northern European systems of incarceration, where the goal is less about punishment and more about turning out people who can be good neighbors.

Here, Luis (Pennsylvania prison rules prevent me from using his last name) has use of four stainless steel stoves, two blond-wood islands, pots including a bright blue Dutch oven and a fridge that holds groceries from a nearby supermarket. There are even some not-too-sharp knives.

Read more at LA Times.