National Offender Management Service Annual Report And Accounts 0809
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National Offender Management Service Annual Report and Accounts 0809 by Great Britain. National Offender Management Service,Great Britain. Parliament House of Commons Pdf
National Offender Management Service annual report and Accounts 0809
National Offender Management Service Annual Report and Accounts 2010-2011 by Great Britain. National Offender Management Service,Stationery Office (Great Britain) Pdf
National Offender Management Service annual report and Accounts 2010-2011
The English Prison Health System After a Decade of Austerity, 2010-2020 by Nasrul Ismail Pdf
Austerity has reconfigured and scaled back the governance and delivery of public services and negatively affected society’s most vulnerable groups. This book opens up the closed world of English prisons to examine its impact on prison health governance and healthcare delivery. It argues that austerity has been a decade-long, large-scale political experiment that has caused debt to balloon, eroded the prison health system and perpetuated a cycle of punishment resulting in sicker prisoners. In short, austerity has violated prisoners’ human rights. Drawing on interviews and data from existing longitudinal and economic analyses, the book demonstrates how austerity has resulted in high rates of recidivism, diminished what remains of the welfare state, and increased inequality and punitiveness. Despite a decade of failure, there is a marked political reluctance to dispense with austerity, and the governmental juggernaut continues to produce the same result. As the spectre of recession increases, caused in part by Brexit and COVID-19, these failures are ever more perilous. This book blends the interdisciplinary perspectives of criminology, public health, sociology, law, social policy, politics, and economics to enable greater understanding of the impact of austerity on health governance, prison healthcare, the prison workforce, and prisoners’ health and safety. It challenges current policy, practice and thinking, and is a must read for anyone who wants to reflect on how the political economic structure can affect the governance and delivery of healthcare services in marginalised settings, beyond prisons, and indeed beyond England.
National Offender Management Service Annual Report and Accounts 2013-2014 by Great Britain. National Offender Management Service,Stationery Office (Great Britain) Pdf
National Offender Management Service Annual Report and Accounts 2009-2010 by Stationery Office (Great Britain) Pdf
The National Offender Management Service (NOMS) is an executive agency of the Ministry of Justice (MoJ), bringing together prison and probation services to deliver the punishment and orders of the courts in custodial and community settings in England and Wales. NOMS operates through a number of providers, including: probation services across England and Wales; HM Prison Service -125 prisons whose 45,0001 staff are directly employed by NOMS; private sector companies managing 11 contracted out prisons; contractors providing services including prisoner escort, bail accommodation and electronic monitoring of offenders; public, private and voluntary/community agency partners including health, employment and training providers. This annual report covers the key performance indicators of r2009-10 and presents examples of the type of work which prisons and probation do with offenders to meet the complex challenges of protecting the public and reducing reoffending.
At the heart of his book is his conclusion that prison simply does not work, failing on three fundamental levels. The view of the popular media is that when prisoners are locked up they cannot commit crime. This is not true. Podmore shows how crime actually proliferates in prison, how serious organised crime is allowed to flourish there through bad management, and how the UK's prisons are a multi-million pound investment bank for the black economy. The public sees prison as a deterrent. This book shows that whilst it may deter the white, middle classes, for the majority of those behind bars it is merely a social tax, or as Norman Stanley Fletcher was told in Porridge, 'an occupational hazard'. It shows that for many across the spectrum of social exclusion it is a place of safety and preferable to life on the streets. Also, whatever spin is put on the figures it is clear that the majority of those leaving prison will quickly reoffend. OUT OF SIGHT, OUT OF MIND is a remarkable book that seeks to ignite a debate across society about a vital subject we ignore at our peril.