Description
Dunmore Publishing Limited THE PROBLEM OF PRISONS : CORRECTIONS REFORM IN NEW ZEALAND SINCE 1840 by Greg Newbold
For more than 160 years New Zealand has struggled to find a formula for dealing with criminals in a humane workable and effective way. Arthur Hume the first Inspector of Prisons presided over a regime of hard physical labour and severe discipline under austere conditions. Changing philosophies over the decades meant policies of flogging and punishment diets gave way to homely touches such as budgies potplants and radios in prisoners cells. Hardening public attitudes to increasingly violent crime in recent years have brought tougher controls on parole and recently the longest non-parole sentence ever handed down. But under all regimes reoffending rates have remained disappointingly high. Newbold provides a comprehensive history of the legislative and administrative changes in corrections and interweaves descriptions of the day-to-day realities of prison life as well as more occasional dramas such as the notorious prison escapes by Maori Mac George Wilder and John Gillies and the 1965 inmate riot that left Mt Eden almost uninhabitable for days. The Problem of Prisons is the first analysis of the history of the corrections system in New Zealand. It weighs the complex factors that have driven New Zealands correctional philosophy and practice since 1840.