Emotion, Not Reason, Is Driving New Zealanders’ Attitudes Towards Crime And Punishment

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TRYING TO TALK with New Zealanders about crime and punishment is never easy. In our highly punitive culture, people who break the law generally receive very little sympathy from their fellow citizens. For most Kiwis the blunt formula: “you do the crime, you do the time”; is sufficient.

Asking New Zealanders why some people “do the crime” usually elicits an equally blunt explanation. Criminals are “bad bastards” – pure and simple. In vain do reformers point to the offenders’ dysfunctional upbringings: to the violence and abuse that more often than not has surrounded them since birth. The stock rejoinder thrown back in these “do-gooders” faces is: “Look, I know plenty of people who had difficult childhoods, but none of them ever stabbed a dairy-owner or raped and murdered a teenage girl.”

The reformers’ job is made even harder by the ordinary New Zealander’s genuine empathy for the victims of crime. Nothing inflames New Zealand’s “sleepy hobbits” like the handing down of a prison-sentence deemed manifestly inadequate to the severity of the offence.

The name “Sensible Sentencing” captures this phenomenon brilliantly. Conjured-up is the negative image of an over-educated liberal judge who has clearly paid far more attention to the report of some away-with-the-fairies psychiatrist than he has to the impact statements of the victim and/or her family. In the eyes of these citizens, a “sensible” sentence invariably involves locking-up the perpetrator and throwing away the key.

It does no good to point out that putting a bad person in prison almost never results in a better person coming out. “We don’t put them in prison to make them better”, say the sensible sentencers. “We put them inside to give their victims some justice and to keep the rest of us safe.”

Most of the people who say this sort of thing have absolutely no idea what a real prison is like – never having spent so much as a single hour locked-up in a concrete cell. They’ve never experienced the loss of personal liberty. Never been caged. Never faced an endless procession of grey, featureless days punctuated only by shattering displays of human cruelty. Never had to endure emotional and physical pain without the slightest prospect of care or solace.

Ensuring that most people never find out what prison is really like is one of the key objectives of those who seek to profit out of the incarceration of human-beings. For the big corporations behind private prisons, keeping the focus on the victims of crime is crucial.

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All parents at one time or another fear for their children’s safety – imagining the very worst when they don’t come home on time. That’s why it’s so easy for them to empathise with those whose loved ones really have been injured or killed. Directing the fear and anger generated by violent crime against its perpetrators and those who defend them is a lot easier than trying to make the public understand what gave rise to the offending in the first place. The very last thing the private prisons lobby want people to say about the person in the dock is: “There, but for the grace of God, goes my son or daughter.” Or, even worse: “That could have been me.”

Keeping the focus away from the grim realities of incarceration also serves those with a vested interest in downplaying the whole question of the rights of accused persons. If people knew what being locked-up was like, then they’d be very careful to ensure that the presumption of innocence was respected and upheld.

It was the famous English jurist, Sir William Blackstone, who said: “It is better that ten guilty persons escape than that one innocent suffer.” It is perhaps the greatest achievement of New Zealand’s Sensible Sentencing Trust that the present reality of dozens of innocent persons spending months in remand cells for offences they will later be acquitted of does not enrage the New Zealand public. Their motto would appear to be: “It is better that ten innocent people remain locked-up than that one guilty person re-offends on bail.”

In a social climate such as this it is quite pointless to simply enjoin the government of the day to “do the right thing” and empty out the remand prisons, or, to bring forward the parole eligibility for those prisoners convicted of non-violent offences. Were the government to respond positively to such appeals its political opponents would have a field-day. “Look at them!”, the conservative politicians would scream. “They’re letting these criminals walk free!” The inevitable political backlash would almost certainly be fatal.

What’s required is a well-considered and well-funded campaign to bring home the realities of crime and punishment: the conditions that breed offending and the circumstances in which convicted offenders are expected to rehabilitate themselves. Such a campaign should aim to recruit not just lawyers and criminologists, but journalists, novelists, playwrights and screenwriters. Rousing human empathy is as much a mission for the arts as it is for the sciences – maybe even more so.

Watching movies like Twelve Angry Men, Dead Man Walking and The Shawshank Redemption will likely win more converts to the cause of improving our criminal justice system and the prisons it fills than reading lengthy learned articles in academic journals. On the vexed question of New Zealanders’ attitudes towards crime and punishment, reason, unaided by emotion, will never be enough.

8 COMMENTS

  1. Brilliant! Invite somebody like Taika Waititi to spend a week at Waikeria Prison, the amazing film that would come out of that experience will have a profoundly positive effect towards a better way. I’d pay to see that movie.

  2. There’s a hell of a difference between people’s attitude to unprovoked violent crime, especially against women, and non violent offences against inanimate objects. To mix them up into the same issue is not constructive to improving attitudes. No one who thinks that someone who has shot a storekeeper or raped and murdered a teenage girl should be put out of society so that they do not repeat the adventure, is going to change their mind by reading this article.
    Private prisons is another matter altogether, and combining that issue with the issue of public safety , seeking to align a belief in incarceration to protect the vulnerable in society with support for private prisons does not impress me.
    D J S

    • Well, Z, the basis of justice is innocent-until-proven-guilty. If a case doesn’t prove guilt, then the presumption of innocence must stand.

      Otherwise we’re all guilty of something. It just remains to be found what that guilt is.

  3. Could we change the system enough so that people aren’t waiting for months for their case to be heard?

    By the time it’s before a judge of any kind memories have been modified, it’s becoming a bit of a blur. Can we just move on now?

    Plus the diminishing of legal aid and the very high cost of representation – is that ‘justice’? Or something quite venal?

    Time for a shake-up, even if National bleats about ‘another enquiry’. Too many people are missing out on an honest deal, and too many who are chronically dismissive of social ways are clogging the system.

    Those in and of the culture of thievery and violence have their own ways of dealing with defaulters. It’s when that culture collides with the ‘mainstream’ that the waves threaten the stopbank between and we invoke the deterrents of ‘our’ culture. Prisons and rehab and other strange treatments.

    It’s not as simple as it looks. Distant lost lambs can look quite different close up…

  4. An excellent article that covers ALL aspects of our fundamentally flawed Criminal [In]justice System that appears lost on Mr Stone. ​Andrew Little, Kelvin Davis and others in the current administration recognise the flaws in the system but are also aware of the potential backlash from ignorant kiwis indoctrinated by too many years of the KEY Mob. Those who still believe that the “basis of justice is innocent-until-proven-guilty” need an urgent wake up call. The system is actually based on the “guilty until acquitted” principle while the police and crown lawyers operate a system predicated on the “never let truth get in the way of a conviction” principle. Most defense lawyers – esp those working on legal aid – are equally guilty because a ‘found guilty’ client is worth megabucks so they have little incentive to strive for an acquittal. Bill English acknowledged that “Prisons are a Fiscal and Moral Failure” but was forced to allocated billions of taxpayer funds to this failed system because bigots like Key, Collins and Adams sat around same Cabinet table. (See: http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PO1612/S00145/prisons-what-did-bill-english-really-mean.htm for further enlightenment.

  5. Some violent offenders come from a privileged background, not a deprived one at all. Often violence against women is derived from a sense of entitlement .
    D J S

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