Upgrading electronic monitoring, downgrading probation: Reconfiguring ‘offender management’ in England and Wales Cover Image
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Upgrading electronic monitoring, downgrading probation: Reconfiguring ‘offender management’ in England and Wales
Upgrading electronic monitoring, downgrading probation: Reconfiguring ‘offender management’ in England and Wales

Author(s): Mike Nellis
Subject(s): Criminology, Penology, Penal Policy
Published by: SAGE Publications Ltd
Keywords: Electronic monitoring; GPS tracking; privatization; police; Transforming Rehabilitation;

Summary/Abstract: England and Wales is currently privatizing most of its Probation Service and simultaneously planning to create the largest and most advanced electronic monitoring (EM) scheme in the world, using combined GPS tracking and radio frequency technology. Downgrading one, upgrading the other. Using a mix of published and unpublished sources, discussions with some key players in these developments, (and a ‘critical policy analysis’ perspective), this article begins by documenting the post-2010 development of GPS tracking, and the emergence of strong police support for its large-scale use. It notes the role of a rightwing think tank, Policy Exchange, in promoting the view that the GPS-based tracking of offenders’ movements is an intrinsically superior form of ‘electronic monitoring’ that should fully replace the discredited but still prevailing radio frequency EM, which can only restrict people to a single location. In the course of devising a third contract with commercial organizations to deliver EM, it transpired that the incumbent providers had been systematically overcharging the government for their services. Although a public scandal, and a series of official enquires – summarized here – resulted from this, the general momentum behind the outsourcing of penal interventions has not been slowed: the Conservative-led Coalition government is pursuing a relentlessly neoliberal agenda, driven far more by financial imperatives and technological preferences than anything that makes proper penal sense. The creation of a large, advanced GPS-based EM programme may not in fact work out in practice, but the government’s readiness to envision it shows where untrammelled neoliberalism points in respect of ‘offender management’ techniques.

  • Issue Year: 6/2014
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 169-191
  • Page Count: 23
  • Language: English