Private
Prisons and Public Accountability: Australia and
Abroad |
24
November 1998
(Public Seminar)
Chair:
Judge Greg Woods, District Court of NSW
Speakers:
"The Diminishing Returns on privatisation?:
A National Survey of U.S. Private Prisons"
Dr James Austin, Executive Vice-President,
National Council on Crime and Delinquency, Washington
DC,
"Operational
Issues in Private Prisons"
Mr Kelvin Anderson, General Manager, Victorian Operations,
Corrections Corporation of Australia,
"Community
Monitoring of the Private Prison: Implications for NSW"
Mr Jim Mellor, Founder of Private Prison Watch (a Positive
Justice Centre project),
Professor Arie Freiberg, Department of Criminology,
University of Melbourne,
Convenor:
Dr Garry Coventry, Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Law,
University of Sydney
A
most significant shift in Australian correctional practices
has been the introduction of privatised prison facilities
in recent years. Whether Australia should expand this
sector of corrections is a matter of public importance.
Informed opinion requires input from a range of areas
including government, correctional service providers,
the broader community and its agencies. Through these
voices that represent organisational interests, as well
as the imprisoned population, we might be better prepared
to assess the relative merits of future alternatives
for corrections in New South Wales.
This
public seminar has been organised to provide different
perspectives on the operations of private prisons and
important matters regarding the extent to which these
developments have maintained or altered the public accountability
of our prison systems. Speakers will draw on available
research evidence, prison operational practices and
public policy issues that require careful consideration
for formulating government options. Reference to other
jurisdictions, both in Australia and overseas, where
private facilities operate will be featured in presentations. |