Publications and Research - PFNZ 2006 Conference    

 

 

Report of 2006 Prison Fellowship Conference

 

‘Beyond Retribution – Advancing the Law and Order Debate’

 

 

PFNZ Conference 2006 - 'Beyond Retribution'

 

 

Report on 2006 Conference – ‘Beyond Retribution’ – available for purchase now or download specific sections of the report below.

 

In May 2006, Prison Fellowship held a landmark Conference – “Beyond Retribution – Advancing the Law and Order Debate”.  It was considered by many to be the most significant conference of its kind to be held in the last decade. 

 

A report of that conference is now available for purchase.  In the view of those that have previewed the publication, it makes a valuable contribution to current thinking about prisons,  prisoners, and alternatives to imprisonment.  Contributors include criminologists, community leaders, senior public servants, politicians and members of the Notorious Chapter of the Mongrel Mob. 

 

 

Click arrows to download:

 

View the table of contents here (PDF 717Kb, 1 Page)

 

View an outline of the report here  (PDF 207Kb, 6 Pages)

 

To purchase a copy of the report, download the order form  (Word Doc 29Kb, 1 Page)

 

  

 

Click links below to download papers from the conference

1.

Preface

Rt Rev Sir Paul Reeves

2.

Introduction

Ian Elliot

3.

Conference Overview

Kim Workman

1.

Setting the Stage for Reform

 

4.

Corrections: Straight Thinking is not Enough – it’s Time to Think Laterally 

Hon Damien O’Connor, Minister of Corrections

5.

Beyond the Holding Tank, or Reforming Prison – One Bumper Sticker at a Time 

Bonnie Robinson

6.

The Justice Sector and the Challenge of a Growing Prison Population 

Hon Mark Burton, Minister of Justice

2.

Key Issues in Reform

 

7.

Sentencing and Parole: A New Paradigm

Dr Warren Young

8.

How to Reduce the New Zealand Prison Population

John D Whitty

9.

Punishment, Politics & Public Opinion: The Sorcerer’s Apprentice Revisited 

Professor John Pratt

10.

The Case for a Multi-Party Accord: A Panel Discussion

Professor Jonathan Boston(Chair) 

11.

Summary of Day One

Professor Jonathan Boston

3.

Working within the Justice System

 

12.

Doing Adult Justice

Judge David Carruthers

13.

Time To Teach The Old Dog New Tricks? What the Adult Courts can learn about Sentencing and Imprisonment from  the Youth Court

Judge A J Becroft

14.

Restorative Justice for Young People in New Zealand: Lessons from Research 

 Dr Gabrielle Maxwell

4.

Toward Prisoner Transformation

 

15.

Promoting Human Goods and Reducing Risk

Professor Tony Ward

16.

Prison, Prisoners and the Bible

Dr Chris Marshall

17.

Commentary on Day Two: What Values and Concepts Underpin Restorative Justice? 

Dr Gabrielle Maxwell

5.

Prisoners in the Community

 

18.

Prisoner Reintegration – Looking Forward

Phil McCarthy

19.

Prisoner Reintegration – Toward a Model of Community Partnership 

Kim Workman

20.

The Journey to Belonging

Sam Chapman and the Notorious Bros 

21.

The Notorious Bros’ Story

Roy Dunn and the Notorious Bros 

 

Future Indicatives

 

22.

New Developments in Criminal Justice

Daniel W Van Ness

23.

Restorative Justice – The Long View

Judge F W M (Fred) McElrea

 

The Conference in Retrospect

 

24.

After the Ball is Over

Kim Workman

25.

Conference Statement