Quaker calls for Penal Commission
Quaker calls for Penal Commission
A strong plea
for New Zealand to establish a Commision on penal reform,
was made by the 2011 Quaker lecturer Tony Taylor. He
suggested the time might be ripe for ideas about penal
reform. He saw a glimmer of hope in the recent comments of
The Deputy Prime Minister/Minister of Finance, Bill English.
He is reported as telling a forum of the Families Commission
on 11th May that prisons were a “moral and fiscal
failure”. He said, “Prisons shouldn't be built any more
... we must challenge recidivism, consider long term welfare
... improve the decison-making process ... (and urged the
forum to) please come and scare us with ideas” Tony Taylor
urged, “Bring on the ideas”
Tony was delivering
the annual Quaker Lecture in Whanganui last weekend. Tony is
Emiritus Professor of Psychology of Victoria University. The
lecture was titled “Changing the Prison System”.
The Penal Commission he proposes should be
accountable to Parliament and regularly review progress in
penal matters. In particular it should aim to keep prisons
only for incorrigible offenders, rather than the majority of
prisoners who could earn redemption by other means. The
Commission would deal with the rehabilitation of offenders
and assistance to their families and attend to the human
rights of victims and their families.
Tony Taylor
stated our prison system was overdue for reform. The general
public had long been silent on the subject compared to a
vociferous minority demanding more of the same and harder
penalties. Our prison rate, 180 per 100,000 of the
population is second only to the USA in the Western World.
Finland on the other hand has reduced from 180 to 50
prisoners per 100,000 population. We should do the
same.
ends