Rethinking Crime - Newsletter 104, July 2012
Tuesday, 10 July 2012, 12:34 pm
Press Release: Rethinking Crime and Punishment
Newsletter 104, July 2012
In this
Issue:
The Government’s Reducing Crime
and Reoffending Action Plan
The Government’s
Reducing Crime and Reoffending Action Plan While some of
the goals may best be described as ‘aspirational’, it is
difficult to argue against the direction and intent. It
effectively takes the crime and justice debate to another
level. The dialogue will shift over the next two years from
“what should we do?” to “how should we do it?”
The Formation of the Justice Coalition
Eight months ago, Rethinking started a
conversation with a group of Justice NGO’s, about the
need for a more collaborative. This week, we announce the
formation of the Justice Coalition, which includes Victim
Support, Prisoners Aid and Rehabilitation Trust, Salvation
Army, Restorative Justice Aotearoa, Community Law Centres of
Aotearoa, New Zealand Howard League for Penal Reform Inc,
Henwood Trust, National Coalition of Howard Leagues, Robson
Hanan Trust (Rethinking Crime and Punishment) The National
Collective of Independent Women’s Refuges, and Prison
Fellowship. Resisting the ‘Deficit’ Model
- A Strengths Based Approach to Prisoner
Reintegration
In the fifth article of the series
on the Prime Ministers Goals for Crime Reduction, we
consider an area in which policy is still in its formative
stage – prisoner reintegration.
The government’s
recently announced Reducing Crime and Reoffending Action
Plan, potentially shifts the emphasis back toward partnering
with community agencies in the provision of prisoner
reintegration and offender rehabilitation.
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In this
article ‘How should we Reintegrate Prisoners?” we
discuss the recent history of prisoner reintegration policy
in New Zealand, and consider what the essential ingredients
of an effective community based prisoner reintegration model
might look like. Measuring the Loss of Māori
Potential in the Criminal Justice Sector
TPK
recently commissioned BERL (Business and Economic Research
Ltd) to develop a macro-modelling tool that assists Te Puni
Kōkiri in determining the loss in Māori potential due to
their involvement in the criminal justice system. It is
envisioned to shift mind-sets from a “deficit outlook”
to “potential opportunities” outlook that examines the
rate of Māori offending from the perspective of lost
opportunities.
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