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16 Punishment & Soc'y 3 (2014)

handle is hein.journals/punscty16 and id is 1 raw text is: 




Article


Penal reform 'Canadian

style': Fiscal

responsibility and

decarceration in Alberta,

Canada


           Punishment & Society
                  16(1) 3-31
         @ The Author(s) 2014
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   DOI: 10.1177/1462474513506272
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Cheryl Marie Webster
University of Ottawa, Canada

Anthony N Doob
University of Toronto, Canada




Abstract
To fulfil a political promise to eliminate the provincial fiscal deficit, the (conservative)
Premier of Alberta cut all budgets by roughly 20 per cent in 1993-1994. As an unantici-
pated by-product, this political solution to a political problem resulted in a 32 per cent
decrease in provincial imprisonment between 1993  and 1997. Economic  imperatives
created the catalyst for changes in imprisonment policies. However, the types of change
and the mechanisms for achieving them reflected Canada's specific history, culture and
politico-legal structures. Decarceration was consistent with core Canadian values
rooted in the long-standing belief in the need for restraint in the use of imprisonment
and a lack of faith in its effectiveness as a crime control strategy. On the surface, this
case study is yet another example of decarceration. However, the interactive and multi-
factorial explanatory model underlying Alberta's reduction in its prison population
raises questions about not only single factors or simple additive models as explanations
for changes in penal policies but also uni-dimensional solutions to jurisdictions in need
of fiscal restraint. The historical and cultural embeddedness of Alberta's decarceration
alerts us to its country-specific nature and the need to situate imprisonment  in
a broader set of concerns.


Keywords
Canada, decarceration, values



Corresponding author:
Anthony N Doob, Centre for Criminology & Sociolegal Studies, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M5S
3K9, Canada.
Email: anthony.doob@utoronto.ca

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