Maxim Institute - real issues - No 242
Maxim Institute - real issues - No 242
01 Mar 2007
Maxim Institute - real issues - No 242 1 March 2007 www.maxim.org.nz
Rehab important for reducing re-offending Immigration policy should serve the whole country "Dadlessness" a leading cause of social dysfunction
IN THE NEWS Nominations open for School Boards of Trustees - "Husband" and "wife" exclusive? - Correction from Real Issues 241
Rehab Important For Reducing Re-Offending
Corrections Minister, Damien O'Connor, announced this week that the number of places in drug and alcohol treatment units will double, with three more units opening over the next two years. The units are part of the Government's "Effective Interventions in Criminal Justice" package, aimed at aiding rehabilitation, reducing re-offending, and finding better alternatives to prison.
Up to 60 percent of offenders are affected by drugs or alcohol at the time of their offending, and over 80 percent will struggle with some form of addiction to alcohol or drugs over the term of their lives. To rehabilitate, to reform, to reconnect and rebuild, we cannot afford to ignore the factors which make the return to crime easier, or the release process hard. Addressing addiction is a vital part of this process, and in the end, emphasising rehabilitation, as this package does, should result in a safer society for us all. Recidivism is bad for everyone and initiatives like this, which aim at making sure offenders do not waste their second chance, are welcome and desperately needed.
Punishment is, and ought always to remain, a central goal of the criminal justice system. But at the same time, we ought to consider what will, and what ought, to happen when the prison gate opens. Rehabilitation has a greater chance of taking root when addictions are not an issue, and in small steps, this initiative aims at producing punished criminals who will not offend again. If effective, it will mean fewer victims, fewer crimes, and a safer society.
Read Maxim Institute's media release from 28
February
Read
more about the Effective Interventions in Criminal Justice
package
Immigration
Policy Should Serve The Whole Country Maori Party
co-leader, Tariana Turia, called this week for restrictions
on immigration from Western countries, accusing the
government of trying to stop "the browning of New Zealand".
In the wake of the Statistics New Zealand decision that the
number of Maori seats will remain at seven, Mrs Turia has
expressed concern that high rates of immigration dilute
Maori electoral representation. She has also argued that the
Treaty of Waitangi provides for Maori to be consulted on
immigration matters, and that Maori concerns can no longer
be pushed aside. Immigration policy should not be based on
electoral mathematics. We should not set policy on
immigration to serve sectional or political interests, but
our whole country. Migrants who bring skills we need, who
respect our values, and desire to make a contribution to
their new country should be welcome regardless of race or
colour. Mrs Turia is concerned with what is best for
Maori, which is not surprising for the leader of the Maori
Party. Indeed most of us tend to be most concerned with our
own patch. But we elect our Members of Parliament not only
to represent their constituents, or the interest that
elected them, but to govern for, and in the interest of, the
whole country. And our country benefits from controlled and
wise immigration, regardless of whether the Maori Party does
or does not. We ought to listen to any legitimately
expressed concern, but we ought also to act in the best
interests of New Zealand and for the common good. Read
Tariana Turia's previous comments on immigration
"Dadlessness"
A Leading Cause Of Social Dysfunction The Social Justice
Research Group's landmark report, Breakdown Britain: Interim
Report on the State of the Nation, continues to stir debate,
as British politicians increasingly begin to recognise the
importance of marriage as a social glue, and the marriage
rate in Britain reaches historic lows. The report's
emphasis on dissolution, dysfunction and "Dadlessness"
continues to be controversial with some deriding it for
daring to argue that these are leading causes of poverty,
educational failure, intergenerational relationship
instability, delinquency and teenage pregnancy. The survey
data collected showed that poverty and indebtedness were the
most concerning factors for families in distress, and family
breakdown clearly contributed to this. After a divorce,
women were, on average, 18 percent worse off financially;
men by 2 percent. The report shows that family dissolution
not only contributes to higher poverty rates, it also leads
to further family breakdown. Children whose parents divorced
generally had a lower socioeconomic base and less stable
relationships in adulthood, which increased the possibility
that they too would divorce. Further, children whose parents
separated, or whose parents had had children in their teens,
were more likely to be teenage parents themselves, thus
continuing the poverty cycle. This report adds weight to a
growing body of international research indicating that a
father's absence is often associated with risks for
children's development. Research shows that active father
involvement matters a great deal to children, even after
taking income, a mother's involvement and various other
demographic variables into account. The authors of this
report are bravely tackling a thorny political issue. In
society's attempt to protect parents and children who have
suffered family breakdown from feeling any kind of offence,
we are skating dangerously close to saying that dads don't
really matter. It is time we had the courage to face up to
the consequences of relationship dysfunction. If we do not,
children will continue to miss out. Read the report,
Breakdown Britain: Interim Report on the State of the Nation
IN THE NEWS Nominations Open For School Boards Of
Trustees Nominations opened on 1 March 2007 for elections
to School Boards of Trustees. Trustees make a vital
difference in their school, serving children, parents and
school communities, and making equally vital decisions. If
you want to do some good in your community and make a
positive contribution to your local school, why not consider
putting your name forward for service on the Board of
Trustees? Nominations close on 15 March 2007. Download a
nomination form
For
more information, visit the Take Action page on
www.maxim.org.nz
"Husband"
And "Wife" Exclusive? A recently released publication
setting out "good practice" in the Scottish National Health
Service when it comes to the "inclusion" of gay, lesbian,
bisexual and transgender people has courted controversy by
labelling words such as "husband" "wife", "mother", "father"
and "marriage" as exclusive, advocating instead for neutral
alternatives. The publication, Fair For All: The Wider
Challenge; Good GLBT Practice in the NHS, is published by
the NHS Inclusion Project, a partnership of Stonewall
Scotland and the Scottish NHS. Read the report, Fair For
All: The Wider Challenge; Good GLBT Practice in the NHS
Correction From Real Issues 241 Maxim Institute
apologises for an error in last week's edition of Real
Issues. In the article, Teenage birth rates continue to
rise, the statistic should have read that pregnancies were
28.4 per 1000 girls aged 15-19. As a percentage, this means
that 2.8 percent of the 15-19 girl population had babies in
2006. TALKING POINT All the great things are simple, and
many can be expressed in a single word: freedom; justice;
honor; duty; mercy; hope. Winston Churchill A registered
charitable trust, funded by donations, Maxim Institute
values your interest and support. Click here to find out
how you can support Maxim Institute
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