Title: Probation and the Media: 19072007
1Probation and the Media 1907-2007
- Shadd Maruna
- Queens University Belfast
- Probation Centenary
- May 2007
2Probation in the News 2005-2007
- 100 Murders in Two Years by Prisoners Out on
ProbationThe Mirror, 6 December 2006 - Murders blamed on probation service blundersThe
Express, 21 April 2006 - Leader Probations Fatal FailureThe Mirror, 1
March 2006 - Probation service blunders that killed top city
bankerThe Evening Standard 28 February 2006 - Probation service blunders left tagged cocaine
addict free to murder jewellerThe Daily
Telegraph 19 September 2005
3The Times 19 July 1894 pg. 13 (buried in the
corner)
4The Times 25 Sept 1912 pg. 3
5The Times 10 March 1924 pg. 10 (same page as
article titled 25 Years of the Cinema)
6What Works in Probation
- Mr. Brown, the City probation officer, replying
to the Lord Mayor, said after six years
experience he was able to estimate that 95 per
cent. of those placed under probation had made
good (The Times, 30 Dec 1927). - Sir Montagu Sharpe (Chairman of Middlesex
Sessions) said that 75 per cent. Of the cases
assisted turned out well (The Times, 10 May
1930).
7Prison Work Ideals
- Speaking as Home Secretary, he was desirous that
the victim of crime should be lifted up and
given a new part in life, so that socially and
economically he might become a decent citizen
again. But there was something far higher and
nobler he wanted them to deal with the souls of
those people. rescue the perishing, raise up
the fallen, and take a human soul and bring it
back to God
8The Power of Science
- Probation was not sentimentalism but true
psychology, and, from the point of view of
citizenship, good business (The Times, 29 April
1937) - Sir Herbert Samuel, Home Secretary I think we
may claim that we have fully kept up with America
in methods relating to the repression and
prevention of crime (The Times, 4 May 1932).
9Saving the YoungFrom Prison
- I cannot express the strength of the view that I
hold that the real hope is to save the young
offender. I have not sufficient words of praise
for the devotion of probation officers (The
Times, 29 April 1937). - Before the War, sentences of imprisonment were
imposed each year on about 150,000 people. The
figure for 1928 was only 54,000. The daily
average before the War was about 20,000 to-day
it was nearly one-half that number (The Times,
10 March 1930). - no hesitation in saying that probation offered,
prima facie, a much more hopeful method than
imprisonment.
10The Times 5 Mar 1935 pg. 13
11 The Times 4 May 1937 pg. 11
12The Times 4 Oct, 1949 pg. 2
13The Times, 1 Feb 1947 pg. 2
14The Times, 13 Apr 1966 pg. 15
15The Times, 27 Sep 1974 pg. 12
16Probation Mythology
- The Probation service is to some extent
sustained and protected by its own myths
whatever the statistics may or may not reveal
about success rates, they are after all only
statistics and it is generally assumed that they
must lack any real significance in the complex
field of human relationships
17It Will Take a Scandal
- Indeed, one suspects that only a major scandal
in the probation service could set in motion any
valid reassessment of the narrative of a
profession that is doing a wonderful job even
though its staff are overworked and underpaid
18Blasting Away at Probation Myths
- Jargon is always readily available, gleaned from
psychiatry, sociology, law, modern business
management (for the ambitious) and Marxism (for
the rebellious) it is invariably ludicrous when
it is not meaningless or dull.
19Need for a Narrative
- One of the primary tasks of an institution that
exercises the power to punish is to provide a
plausible account of what it does and how it does
what it does. - Bullets kill and bars constrain, but the
practice of supervision inevitably involves the
construction of a set of narratives which allows
the kept, the keepers, and the public to believe
in a capacity to control that cannot afford to be
tested too frequently. - -- Jonathan Simon (1993) Poor Discipline Parole
and the Social Control of the Underclass
20Probation in the News 2005-2007
- 100 Murders in Two Years by Prisoners Out on
ProbationThe Mirror, 6 December 2006 - Murders blamed on probation service blundersThe
Express, 21 April 2006 - Leader Probations Fatal FailureThe Mirror, 1
March 2006 - Probation service blunders that killed top city
bankerThe Evening Standard 28 February 2006 - Probation service blunders left tagged cocaine
addict free to murder jewellerThe Daily
Telegraph 19 September 2005
21Negativity Bias
- Good news is no news
- This is the tendency to regard immoral behaviours
as more informative or diagnostic about an
individuals personal traits than positive,
prosocial behaviours. - Researchers have recorded the electrical activity
of the brains cerebral cortex as a reflection of
the magnitude of information processing taking
place and consistently find that our brains
respond quicker and more dramatically to negative
stimuli than positive stimuli.
22Stalin Was Right
- A single death is a tragedy, a million deaths is
a statistic. - Analytic/rational
- vs.
- Intuitive/experiential
- Slovic, P. (2007). "If I Look at the Mass I Will
Never Act Psychic Numbing and Genocide"
23From effective to affective justice (or why
prison works)
- Anyone who wants to improve public debate about
crime needs to be attuned to the emotional
dimension of these issues. - (Indermauer and Hough, 2002 210)
- The public holds a deeply entrenched view that
equates punishment and control with
incarceration, and that accepts alternatives as
suitable only in cases where neither punishment
nor control is thought necessary (Smith 1984
171).
24What Works in Selling Probation?
- 86 agree that Most offenders can go on to lead
productive lives with help and hard work - 77 agree that Even the worst offenders can grow
out of criminal behaviour. - 68 disagree that Most offenders really have
little hope of changing for the better (R) - Maruna, S. and King, A. (2004). Public Opinion
and Community Penalties. In Bottoms, T., Rex, S.
and Robinson, G. (Eds.) Alternatives to Prison
Options for an Insecure Society. Cullompton
Willan.
25Redeemability A Narrative that Works
- New York Times
- There is no public narrative more potent today
-- or throughout history -- than the one about
redemption (Kakutani, 2001). - Let me put it this way, if the public knew that
when you commit some wrongdoing, you're held
accountable in constructive ways and you've got
to earn your way back through these kinds of good
works, the probation service wouldn't be in
the rut were in right now with the public
(Dickey and Smith, 1998 6).