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6 Prob. 1 (1950-1953)

handle is hein.journals/probj6 and id is 1 raw text is: 




9PROBATION

The   Journal   of  the  National   Association of Probation Officers


PRICE
ONE  SHILLING


JAN.   -  FEB.
1   9   5    0


VOLUME 6                                 CONTENTS                                     NUMBER I
                                            Page                                              Page
PROBATION   & THE  STUDY  OF  DELINQUENCY:        IN  OTHER  LANDS:  SWITZERLAND ... ... .... 7
  Lady Ridley   ... ...  ... ...  ... ...  ... 1  BOOK   REVIEWS  ...  ... ...  ... ...  ... ... 8-9
PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS AND CRIME: Dr.              OBITUARY ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 9,
  Lindesay Neustatter ... ... ... ... ...  ... -3 SECOND  INTERNATIONAL  CONGRESS  ON
BRITISH  NATIONAL   CONFERENCE ON SOCIAL            CRIMINOLOGY        ... ...  ... ...  ... ... 9
  WORK     ...  ... ...  ... ...  ... ...  ... 5  PROBATION    FORUM   ... ...  ... ...  ... ... 10
EDITORIAL  ...  ... ...  ... ...  ... ...  ... 6  BRANCH   LINES  ...  ... ...  ... ...  ... ... 11
CHELTENHAM      ... ...  ... ...  ... ...  ... 6  SECRETARY'S   NOTES  AND  DIARY  ....   ... ...12



          PROBATION AND THE STUDY OF

                                 DELINQUENCY
                          By  The  Rt. Hon.   Viscountess RIDLEY,   J.P.
      (From an Address given when opening the Northern Branch Conference, Otterburn, October, 1949)


  I feel greatly honoured by your invitation to me to open
this Conference, and am grateful for the opportunity it
gives me to pay tribute to the magnificent service Proba-
tion Officers are rendering to the community.   Magis-
trates are showing recognition of this service by loading
more and more work upon  your shoulders. Nevertheless
I feel that I am greatly privileged in being able to express
to you to-day in a more personal way, our appreciation of
what you do.
SThe  task you undertake in becoming Probation Officers
is a very bold one. You undertake to try to reform an
individual who has strayed from the straight and narrow
path of Society, after the great forces and traditions of
parental responsibility, religion and education have failed.
And you attain a remarkable standard of success. Yours
is a courageous work-work which  calls for great self-
confidence, great ambition and great faith.
  For this problem, of the struggle of the individual to
conform to the pattern of the Society in which he lives,
is as old as the human race itself. A problem with which
all religious teachers, all philosophers, kings and poli-
ticians have been concerned, since men began to live
together in groups, in tribes, in kingdoms and in nations.
  I am  not convinced that the rise in the number of
children convicted of indictable offences in recent years
proves that there has really been an increase in crime.
We  have no way of knowing what the incidence was a
century ago, but I find it hard to believe that the London
that Dickens describes in Oliver Twist, was morally
healthier, or that the boys that Dr. Barnardo found
sleeping in the streets with no homes at all were better
than boys are to-day when those conditions just do not
exist. I feel sure that if we had any means of compari-
son we should find there had been an improvement, but
with our better methods of detection we bring more
children before the courts, and have to decide how to
deal with them or dispose of them, which raises issues
that they never had to bother about 100 years ago. The


responsibility for the care of the neglected and delinquent
child has passed from individual charity to National Wel-
fare and the public is aroused and alarmed by this new
responsibility.
  I do not thi  we are yet anywhere near a diagnosis
of what the cau es are, and until such a diagnosis is made,
I do not think we can begin to know what the cure will
be.  For unde standing of the human mind is at present
in the stage t at understanding of the human body was
in 400 years ago. It is true to say that before the dis-
section of the human body, there was very little under-
standing of the way it worked. Disease was attributed
to humours, to ill winds, to spells and enchantments, to
the Will of God in the West, or the law of Karma in the
East. The mysteries of the human body are now gradually
giving way to a more real understanding,of the nature
of disease, and hence to its prevention and logical cure.
  But the relationship between mind and brain remains
a mystery. We know that .diseases of the brain are mani-
fested in disorders of the mind: that an encephalitis or
meningitis, may leave a child mentally defective or so
destroy the  moral centre  in its brain that a child who
behaved quite normally before the illness, is changed by
the fever to a liar or a thief. These are among the
greatest tragedies we see in a Juvenile Court, and when-
an uninformed public criticises the leniency of the courts
and demands  a stricter discipline, without knowing all
the facts, it may be asking us to thrash a child who is as
much the victim of a chance infection as the child who is
paralysed as the result of poliomyelitis.
  All the same there are many grave disorders of the
mind which the physiologists have not yet been able to
relate to any recognisable changes in the brain, and
while this mystery of the exact relationship between mind
and btain remains, superstition and theory, as opposed
to scientific fact, pervade our Councils and our Con-
ferences.
                (Continued overleaf)

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