Title: ENGLAND AND WALES
1ENGLAND AND WALES
- Bunic Ana-Marija
- Krianac Anita
2NATIONAL OFFENDER MENAGMENT SERVICE (NOMS)
Her Majesty's Prison Service (HMPS)
National Probation Service (NPS)
3NATIONAL OFFENDER MENAGMENT SERVICE
- department of the Ministry of Justice responsible
for the correctional services in England and
Wales - created on 1 June 2004, by combining parts of
both of the headquarters of the National
Probation Service and Her Majesty's Prison
Service - The two bodies remain distinct but have a strong
unity of purpose to protect the public and
reduce reoffending - NOMS is responsible for commissioning and
delivering adult offender management services, in
custody and in the community - The Director General of NOMS is Phil Wheatley
- (responsible for delivering reduced re-offending
and public protection)
4- Responsibility for delivering a reduction in
re-offending and the management of offenders is
devolved to nine regional offices in England and
one office in Wales - The English regional offices are led by Regional
Offender Managers. The Wales office is led by a
Director of Offender Management. - These leaders are experts in the
offending-related problems of their local area
and are responsible for - 1) commissioning services for their
region - 2) developing a regional reducing
re-offending delivery plan - 3) co-ordinating regional and local
partnerships
5Her Majesty's Prison Service
- the United Kingdom Executive Agency tasked with
managing most of the prisons within England and
Wales - AIMS
- 1) Holding prisoners securely
- 2) Reducing the risk of prisoners re-offending
- 3) Providing safe and well-ordered establishments
in which we treat prisoners humanely, decently
and lawfully - The Prison Service does not manage all prisons
within England and Wales (11 private prisons -
managed by private companies)
6Prison categories
- Male adult prisoners
- Category A prisoners whose escape would be highly
dangerous to the public or national security - Category B prisoners who do not require maximum
security, but for whom escape needs to be made
very difficult - Category C prisoners who cannot be trusted in
open conditions but who are unlikely to try to
escape - Category D prisoners who can be trusted not to
try to escape, and are given the privilege of an
open prison.
- Female adult prisoners
- Category A is identical to that for men
- Closed is for people who are not trusted to not
attempt to escape - Semi-open was introduced in 2001 and is for those
who are unlikely to try to escape - Open is for those who can be trusted to stay
within the prison
7Young offenders and juveniles
- Secure Training Centres
- Local Authority Secure Childrens Homes
- Juvenile Prisons
- Young Offender Institutions
8NATIONAL PROBATION SERVICE
- The National Probation Service for England and
Wales is a statutory Criminal Justice Service
which works with offenders either because they
have just been released from prison or because
they have received a community sentence
(community rehabilitation order,drug treatment
and testing order..)
9A BRIEF HISTORY OF PROBATION
- During the late nineteenth century volutary
societies, led by Church of England Teperance
Society, appointed missionaries to the London
Police Courts to reclaim drunkards and later
other offenders. - 1907 supervision was given a statutory basis
wich allowed courts to appoint and employ
probation officers.Probation officers were
formally empowered to work with offenders and to
advise, assist and befriend offenders placed
under supervison by court.Mayor development
followed including the beginning of work with
prisoners before and after release, civil court
work and reparation in the form of community
service.
10- In the 1970s and 1980s partnership with other
agencies resulted in cautioning schemes,
alternatives to custody ( day centers, special
programme conditions ) - the probation order as a sentence and risk of
custody and risk of reconviction assessment
tools. - 2001 The Criminal and Court Act re-named
probation service as The National Probation
Service for England and Wales - replaced 54 probation committiees with 42 local
probation boards - established 100 funding for the probation
service - created the post of Director General
- made chief officers statutory office holders and
members of local probation bord - appointed by
Secretary of state.
11- in its current form, the NPS is part of the
National Offender Management Service (NOMS)
within the Ministry of Justice - It consists of 42 probation areas which are
coterminous with police force area boundaries - Areas are funded by NOMS and they are accountable
to their Boards and to NOMS via a Regional
Offender Manager - The work of probation areas is scrutinised by HM
Inspectorate of Probation, which reports
independently to UK Government Ministers.
12MINISTRY OF JUSTICE NATIONAL OFFENDER MENAGMENT
SERVICE The strategic commisong, coordination
and menagment of the prison and Probation system
NATIONAL PROBATION SERVICE The National
Director Is responsible for Performance and
development Of Probation
42 PROBATION AREAS Each board is responsible For
local delivery and Partnerships with key
justice Agencies.
- PROBATION STAFFING
- Probation officers 8,520
- Probation Service Officers 6,330
- Admin/Other Staff 5,640
- Managment Staff 890
13NPS aims
- Protecting the public
- Reducing re-offending
- The proper punishment of offenders in the
community - Ensuring offenders' awareness of the effects of
crime on the victims of crime and the public - Rehabilitation of offenders
14Offenders on probation
- Offenders are likely to be put on probation when
- - a judge or magistrate gives them a
community sentence - - the offender is automatically released
from prison after serving half or two-thirds of
their sentence - - the Parole Board decides that the offender
can be released early from a jail sentence - - offenders on probation have to comply with
the rules and requirements of their community
sentence or their release licence from prison - Additional requirements of probation can include
- -
completing alcohol and drug treatment - - staying
in a probation hostel - - staying
away from the area where the crime was
committed - - a
curfew, backed up be electronic tagging - Some offenders are made to stay in probation
hostels, known as Approved Premises ( much higher
degree of supervision)
15The work of probation staff
- protect the public
- reduce the risk of an offender committing a
further offence - (under their supervision and afterwards )
- their work begins even before the offender is
sentenced or released from prison - keep contact with the offender and their family
- monitor the offender's movements while they are
on probation - supporting victims of crime
16- Each year the probation service commences the
supervision of some 175,000 offenders. - Caseload - excess of 200,000 (90 are male and
10 are female) - a quarter of offenders serving community
sentences are aged 16-20 and just less than
three-quarters are aged 21 and over. - Approximately 70 of offenders supervised will be
on community sentences, and 30 imprisoned with a
period of statutory licence supervision in the
community as an integral part of the sentence - NPS assist magistrates and judges in their
sentencing decisions
17New Reforms
- NOMS in 2004 changed the pattern of correctional
services delivery - The Offender Management Bill, introduced in
Parliament late in 2006, was intended to enable
some probation areas to become trusts as part of
wider Government policy - The Bill is completed July 2007, and the first
six probation trusts came into being on 1 April
2008 (Merseyside, South Wales, Humberside,
Dyfed/Powys, West Mercia and Leicestershire
Rutland). - New Probation Trusts enjoy greater freedoms -
they demonstrated that they were robust
organisations capable of delivering to high
standards of performance and efficiency. - Trusts and continuing Boards alike will have a
larger role in the local commissioning of
services from the private, voluntary and
community sectors, - They all still have to deliver on their own
contractual obligations to their Regional
Offender Manager.
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