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58 Prob. J. 3 (2011)

handle is hein.journals/probj58 and id is 1 raw text is: 




Probation                                                   Editorial



The  Journal of Community and Criminal Justice

Copyright © 201 1 NAPO Vol 58(1): 3-8
DOI: 10.1 177/026455051 1401284
www.napo.org.uk
http://prb.sagepub. corn




Revolution or evolution?

The Government's  Green  Paper Breaking the Cycle: Effective Rehabilitation and
Sentencing of Offenders (Ministry of Justice, 2010) has been heralded as a bold
and ambitious attempt to reform what is perceived as an overly centralized, highly
bureaucratic criminal justice system that has been dominated by increases in the
prison population rather than tackling the causes of re-offending. In many respects
it can be seen as victory for the political pugilism of the Justice Secretary reflecting a
progressive and pragmatic response to policy making.
   Reducing the cost of prisons and probation whilst increasing their effectiveness is
central to the proposals but as Helen Mills (2010) has noted, this has been a
common   conundrum  for successive Justice and Home Secretaries in recent years.
The New  Labour years saw an expansion, with associated increased expenditure,
in both organizations resulting in a 'bloated' penal justice system. Indeed, the Gov-
ernment expects the numbers imprisoned to continue to increase until the proposals
contained in its rehabilitation revolution begin to have an effect and stabilize
growth. Whilst the curtailment in the overuse of Indeterminate Sentencers for Public
Protection (IPP) and the lowering of the risk criterion required by the Parole Board
appear  progressive, the impact of other measures, such as the speeding up of the
deportation of foreign national prisoners is by no means certain given that it will
be dependent on agreements  with the countries of origin. At the 'front door' of sen-
tencing the Government aims  to restore public trust through greater transparency
and the introduction of minimum and maximum  sentences where offenders would
serve a minimum  period in prison set without being eligible for release. However,
again according to the Government's own calculations, sentence lengths could actually
increase by around 10 per cent as a result of these changes (The Conservative Party,
2008).
   Alongside reducing the prison population the government also intends to make
prisons places of purpose - particularly in relation to work and industry - as well
as the delivery of justice and punishment, something which  the Green  Paper
acknowledges  has been lacking in prison regimes for too long (Ministry of Justice,
2010:  9). In this new 'working' prison, inmates will work a full working week of up
to 40 hours, in regimes focused on enabling work and  the provision of skills to
enhance  their ability to secure employment on  release. According to figures


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