A 'reformatory' is a
juvenile prison where
legal minors are sent by (juvenile or general)
courts to spend a
custodial sentence, separate from the bad example of and abuse by adult (often hardened)
convicts, usually gender-separated (mainly boys).
It is generally designed not just as a punishment but as a means for (re)education, to reform (hence the name) their hopefully still mendable character, through a combination of strict discipline (symbolic for its harsh reputation is the term
reformatory cane) and schooling (hence many are officially called 'reformatory school' or simply school) and/or labor.
The reality has all too often tended rather to
penal harm and/or
exploitation. Alternative forms of juvenile reeducation have therefore been devised, such as
community services, in some cases with better results.
A well-known example is the
British borstal.
Reformatories in Ontario, Canada
Until 1972, the term reformatory referred to an
Ontario provincial prison for both juveniles and adults. After 1972, when Ontario's Department of Correctional Services (having been renamed in 1968 from the Department of Reform Institutions) became the Ministry of Correctional Services, these facilities were officially redesignated as 'correctional centres'.
Examples:
Ontario Reformatory-Guleph became
Guelph Correctional Centre
Ontario Reformatory-Mimico became
Mimico Correctional Centre
See also
★
Youth detention center
★
Idaho Juvenile Detention Centers