If the new government’s most urgent task on prisons is to
navigate an immediate way through the current population crisis, they should also
be considering ways to avoid a repetition in the future.
When last in power, Labour ministers reviewed how to improve
the balance between the supply of prison places and demand for them. Despite the 2007 recommendation
for an effective, integrated and transparent planning mechanism that reconciles
penal capacity with criminal justice policy, the institution which emerged
after three years of wrangling – the Sentencing Council - has not been willing
or able to fulfil that role.
Since then, Parliament and the courts have been busy willing
the ends of more and longer prison sentences but not the means of enforcing
them. Hence the recent flurry of measures to release prisoners early which Labour
accepts it will have to keep in place in the short term if they form an
administration.
In the long term they should consider two options. First,
the modest idea recommended by Parliament’s Justice
Committee that policy proposals on sentencing should be subject to
independent evaluation, so that the resourcing implications are recognised before
they are enacted.
When it’s introduced, most but not all criminal legislation is
already accompanied by an impact assessment which estimates any need for
additional prison or probation resources to implement it. The future prison population
is projected
annually. So legislators know what’s
coming. But knowledge of impending pressures in prisons have not stopped governments
adding to them, rendering them unmanageable over the last year.
So something more is needed.
Ten years ago, the British Academy argued that penal policy needs
to be insulated from the short-term political and media pressures which so
often prioritise populist initiatives over a principled and sustainable approach.
A
Presumption against Imprisonment recommended the creation of a Penal Policy Committee
(PPC), accountable to Parliament, comprising wide representation and expertise.
Distanced from party political competition, the PPC would develop and formulate
the approach to who should go to prison and for how long.
Such an approach would take full account of the financial,
social and ethical costs of prison as well as its practical availability. The British Academy suggested that the
Sentencing Council, working to a revised remit, would then be able to implement
the policies on sentencing outlined by the PPC.
The Sentencing Council currently takes the view that “absent
an explicit statutory remit” were it to seek, artificially and
unilaterally, to raise or lower sentence levels without good cause it would
rapidly lose the confidence of sentencers, the public and MPs. Arguably within its current remit, the lack
of prison places provides a good enough cause to lower sentence levels. But a
new mandate would certainly be helpful
Is this an idea whose time has come?
Within a week of winning the 1997 election, new Chancellor Gordon
Brown announced the transfer of the task of setting interest rates to an
independent body of experts in the Bank of England. Few now question the role
of the Monetary Policy Committee. If such a body can determine fiscal policy,
why not something similar in criminal justice? It should certainly be explored
in Labour’s promised sentencing review.
Really interesting analysis and proposals, Rob. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteUnless and until revenge is taken out of equation nothing is going to change. The only remit of prison should be public protection and rehabilitation. The hysteria and scope of sex offenders also needs to come to an end but I would say that wouldn't I.
ReplyDeleteAs long as they don’t build more prisons
ReplyDeleteThe last time Labour Party was in government, the 'tough on crime' rhetoric was the order of the day with many laws coming up to make it hard to rehabilitate offenders in the community. I hope this time round their penal policy choices will not be kneejack decisons but research informed and not guided by political expediency.
ReplyDelete