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Describe the history of privatisation of punishment and penal policy in the UK and what caused the prior held anti privatisation stance turn to be more positive. $9.71
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Describe the history of privatisation of punishment and penal policy in the UK and what caused the prior held anti privatisation stance turn to be more positive.

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Comprehensive explanation of privatisation of punishment and penal policy and why it is becoming increasingly prevalent. Content - Privatisation of prisons - Privatisation of probation services - Why the shift towards privatisation - Political influences - Benefits to government and privat...

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  • February 2, 2021
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  • 2019/2020
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Describe the history of privatisation of punishment and penal policy in the UK and what caused
the prior held anti privatisation stance turn to be more positive.

Introduction

 The private provision of penal services is just one aspect of a wider movement to roll back
the state’s involvement in the criminal justice system.
 The debate surrounding private prison dominantly focuses on cost, efficiency and the
quality of service provided.
 The political climate in the UK underwent change in the 1980’s which ushered in the wave
of privatisation that swept across many of the UK’s public services in the 1980’s & 90’s.

Prisons

 England and Wales first saw privatisation of prisons largely as a result of the Criminal
Justice Act 1991 which enabled contracting out of remand prisons.
 Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 allowed for remand and sentenced prisoners to
be held in privately managed prisons.
 The construction of private prisons was run under the Private Finance Initiative, ie cost
considerations were high on the agenda.
 England & Wales has the largest proportion of private prisons in Europe, holding around
19% of the prison population in 2018 (compared with about 9% in the USA).

Probation Services

 Privatisation also extended beyond the prison system to include the probation system.
 The Crime and Disorder Act 1998 introduced electronic monitoring of offenders and 3
private companies were awarded contracts.
 Lord Carter’s report Managing Offenders, Reducing Crime (2003) introduced idea of
‘contestability’: i.e. purchasing probation services from a range of providers.
 Critics claimed there was no business case for this privatisation, but the government did
not listen and created legislation that made it possible to take privatisation of probation
services further.
 Offender Management Act 2007 – made it possible to sell off public probation services
after 2010.
 In 2013 a consultation paper ‘Transforming Rehabilitation’ proposed to outsource most
probation services to private companies and/ or voluntary sector organisations by 2015.
 Later strategies of reform that year confirmed the government’s intention to sell off the
majority of probation work.
 In June 2014, a new National Probation Service was created with 21 new Community
Rehabilitation Companies.
 In January 2015 these contracts with new owners of CRC’s were signed.
 CRC contracts include a ‘Payment by Results’ component (financial incentive to reduce
rates of reoffending.)

Paragraph 1 – why the change?

 Douglas Hard, in 1987 stated he would not accept a case for auctioning or privatising the
prisons or handing over the business of keeping prisoners safe to anyone other than
government servants.

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