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RETHINKING CRIME AND PUNISHMENT

RETHINKING CRIME AND PUNISHMENT. What Works? Murray Short 2012. What I will cover. Tough or soft on crime? Current trends in crime and sentencing The purpose of sentences Effectiveness of sentences; belief and reality Addressing the causes Inequality, crime and imprisonment.

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RETHINKING CRIME AND PUNISHMENT

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  1. RETHINKING CRIME AND PUNISHMENT What Works? Murray Short 2012

  2. What I will cover • Tough or soft on crime? • Current trends in crime and sentencing • The purpose of sentences • Effectiveness of sentences; belief and reality • Addressing the causes • Inequality, crime and imprisonment

  3. Tough or soft on crime • An unhelpful characterisation • Need to be effective on crime • Need for evidenced based policy and practice • Reduced crime reduces victimisation – this must surely be everyone’s goal

  4. Current Trends • Number of people convicted over the past 20 years • Offences • Sentences • Imprisonment • Reconviction and re-imprisonment over a 5-year period

  5. Number of People Convicted 1990 to 2010 Source: Statistics NZ, Criminal Conviction and Sentencing Statistics, 2010

  6. People Convicted by Offence Category Source: Statistics NZ, Criminal Conviction and Sentencing Statistics, 2010

  7. People Convicted: Most Serious Sentence Source: Statistics NZ, Criminal Conviction and Sentencing Statistics, 2010

  8. Convicted Offenders: Prison Sentences Source: Statistics NZ, Criminal Conviction and Sentencing Statistics, 2010

  9. Released Prisoners: Reconviction and Re-imprisonment Rates by Age Department of Corrections, Reconviction patterns of released prisoners: A 60-months follow up analysis, 2009

  10. Re-imprisonment Rate by Time to First Proved Re-offence Department of Corrections, Reconviction patterns of released prisoners: A 60-months follow up analysis, 2009

  11. Reconviction rate by time to first proved re-offence : All community sentences Department of Corrections, Reconviction patterns of offenders managed in the community: A 60-months follow up analysis, 2009

  12. The Purpose of sentences • Punishment • Retribution • Denunciation • Deterrence – individual and general • Rehabilitation • Restoration • Containment • Prevention of re-offending

  13. Effectiveness of sentences: belief and reality • Punishment, retribution, denunciation- yes • Containment – yes and essential for protection of community • Rehabilitation, restoration – limited • Preventing re-offending – very limited • Belief - just like bringing up children • Reality – the children that won’t be brought up! • Sentences, like punishment lose their sting • We need other approaches as well – “prevention is better than cure”

  14. Addressing the causes • Nigel Latta is convinced • “It (the Dunedin study) clearly shows at age three you can identify the children most likely to be in jail by age 26 on the basis of a 30-minute behavioural test. And we know without any doubt that early intervention is how you have an impact on those families.”New Zealand Listener, February 18-24 2012, p 20

  15. Inequality, crime and imprisonment • Emerging evidence of links between income inequality and crime, including many of the “drivers” • “The impact of inequality on violence is even better established and accepted than the other effects of inequality that we discuss in this book...” • Wilkinson, Richard and Kate Pickett; The Spirit Level: Why Equality is Better for Everyone. Penguin Group, Great Britain, 2009.

  16. How much richer are the richest 20% than the poorest 20%? Source: Wilkinson & Pickett, The Spirit Level, 2009

  17. Health and Social Problems are Worse in More Unequal Countries • Index of: • Life expectancy • Math & Literacy • Infant mortality • Homicides • Imprisonment • Teenage births • Trust • Obesity • Mental illness –incl. drug & alcohol addiction • Social mobility Source: Wilkinson & Pickett, The Spirit Level 2009

  18. Child Well-being is Better in More Equal Rich Countries Source: Wilkinson & Pickett, The Spirit Level, 2009

  19. Conclusion A more balanced approach to crime and punishment that invests more resource in addressing the causes. For more information: http://www.rethinking.org.nz/

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