Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Transforming Rehabilitation: Effect on Offender Management
Transforming Rehabilitation: Effect on Offender Management    Transforming  Rehabilitation will improve the Effectiveness, Governance and Legitimacy of  Offender Management in England and Wales  Introduction  The aim of this paper is to examine Transforming Rehabilitation in terms of its effectiveness, governance and legitimacy. Starting out with an explanation of legitimacy and introducing The Carter Report 2003 and its recommendations. Moving on to explain some of the needs for a change in practice, and an insight of some of the views from probation staff themselves and perceptions of negatively withering away of staff. Importantly, there are some explanation of theory, especially regarding desistance and more recently the emergence of The Good Lives Model, as a continuation of The Risk Needs Responsivity model. The explanation regarding some of the outcomes expected by TR, and the need for modernisation. As part of TR a Fee for Service and Payment by Results are explained, with the use of charts for the reader. Managing risk is an important part of the proposed changes and a change in direction to promoting desistance.   Overarching drivers legitimacy and the need to implement change  The term governance is a very old one, but it has been revitalized recently, and has become perhaps one of the most appealing concepts in social science, meaning a new notion reformed, associated with government and public administration. à  Regarding TR, this may be perceived by many detractors as a case of ââ¬Å"new wine in old bottlesâ⬠ Chui and Nellis (2003). Governance has been widely used in local governance. In the case of TR, the popularity of governance may have something to do with distrust about the government. à  That said, The Social Exclusion Unit posited that, recommendations from The Carter Report (2003) stated that despite recent changes that have brought the management of the services closer together, no front-line organisation ultimately owns the target for reducing re-offending. This can lead to gaps in the system, for example, there is no joint national resettlement strategy and interventions in prison are often not followed up in the community, (Social E   xclusion Unit 2002). This in turn leads to reconsideration of the traditional theories of public administration. Self-confidence of traditional public administration has been destroyed and it has faced an ââ¬Ëidentity crisis.ââ¬â¢ Public administration, which has been supposed to be a powerful tool for solving social problems, falls down to a serious social problem itself. As a result, many theories have been proposed as alternatives to the traditional public, Ostrom (1986).  The  case for an innovative approach to offender management is quite clear cut, as  the previous attempts have been deemed costly. It is stated that in the UK more  than à £3bn is spent every year on prisons, and almost à £1bn annually on  delivering sentences in the community, MOJ (2013). Despite this, overall  reoffending rates have barely changed over the last decade and the same faces are  seemingly reappearing back through the system. Almost half of all offenders  released from custody in 2010 reoffended within a year. Over 6000 offenders  sentenced to short custodial sentences of less than 12 months in the year to  June 2012 had previously received more than 10 community sentences, yet gaps in  the sentencing framework mean very little can be done to prevent them from  returning to crime once they are released back into the community MOJ, (2013). In 2014, under the Transforming  Rehabilitation (TR) changes MOJ, (2013), and Probation Trusts were split into  the National Probation Service (NPS) which became part of the civil service and  21 Community Rehabilitation Companies (CRCs) which were subject to  marketisation and a commercial tendering process, as seen in  Fig.1. with their Contract Package Areas (CPA). à  After the bidding process was completed in  2014, eleven CRCs were owned by private sector companies leading a partnership  with third sector organisations, three were joint ventures between the private,  public, and third sector, three were a public, private, and third sector  partnership; two were owned by the private sector exclusively; and another two  were equity joint ventures between the private and third sectors (Deering and  Feilzer 2015, p.13).   Fig.1. CPA Map showing the 21 Contract Package Areas   On 29 October 2014, the MoJ announced its preferred  bidders to run the Community Rehabilitation Companies in these areas. Here are  the successful bidders and as seen in Fig.2.  Sodexo and NACRO have been successful in six CRCsInterserve who are leading partnerships in five CRCsMTCNovo, a Joint Venture between MTC and a number of other organisations,à  have won London and Thames Valley.Working Links are the preferred bidders in three CRCs.The Reducing Reoffending Partnership à  is a Joint Venture between Ingeus, St Giles Trust and CRI, who will run the two large Midlands CRCs , being Staffs & West Midlands and Derby, Leicester, Nottinghamshire & Rutland). Webster (2017)   Fig.2. Showing winning bidders in the Contract Package Areas   Clearly the changes imposed because of TR have had the potentia to affect all three types of legitimacy, but perhaps particularly more so upon self- legitimacy. (Robinson, Burke and Millings , 2016)  Around 50% of all crime is committed by individuals who have already known by criminal justice system (CJS). The cost to the taxpayer of reoffending is estimated to be à £9.5 to à £13 billion per year. There has been little positive change in reconviction rates and almost half of those released from prison go on to reoffend within 12 months. The need to reduce reoffending to reduce both the number of victims and the costs to the taxpayer. To achieve this, there is a need to adopt a tough but intelligent criminal justice system that punishes people properly when they break the law, but also supports them so they donââ¬â¢t commit crime in the future. (MOJ, 2015)  Others  are more guarded in the way they anticipate the future of TR, and Canton (2011)  in particular, stresses the importance of what the probation service continues  to represent and its values, such as belief in the possibility of change and  social inclusion. McNeill (2011) characterises probation as a justice agency,  with key roles in advocating for probationers in relation to access to social  goods that have been denied and mediating between law breakers, their  communities and social institutions.   This  ideal view contrasts with the reality of delivering community sanctions in a  tough penal climate dominated by public protection, which is one of Liz Trussââ¬â¢s  key priorities, with a reduction of violence to staff currently running at 40%  and a spotlight on education as the 3rd priority, especially English  and Maths, MOJ (2017). McNeill also argues that it is critical for the long-term  legitimacy and credibility of probation. At this point in time, it may be uncertain  as to whether a doom-ridden or a phoenix-rising vision of the probation future  is more likely to come about, although some truths may be gathered from  empirical evidence gathered from probation officers and trainees.  à  There seems to be a great deal of optimism on  one side of the camp for TR, as to how the recent changes will be implemented,  but on the other side, a great deal of pessimism regarding the implementation  of TR. NAPO (National Association of Probation Officers) and UNISON, (Public  Sector Trade Union), collectively had made their feelings known. They both stated  that a large majority of the 17,000 probation staff refer to TR as a ââ¬Å"catalogue  of errorsâ⬠ in terms of staff assignment, a mismatch between workload, staffing  levels and staff location, compromised risk management, reduced IT capability  with NOMS, nDelius case management system, although C-NOMIS already had  inherent problems as seen in fig.3. Increased bureaucracy and a huge rise in  the use of temporary and sessional staff were deemed to be the main problems.  High performing Probation Trusts have been replaced with poorly performing replacements.  (NAPO and UNISON, 2017). The probation staff were quick to point out that they  were not to blame for the errors. Regarding the use of temporary and sessional  staff will aid the ability to be dynamic and cope with peaks and troughs. The  use of the voluntary sector with CRCââ¬â¢s may also be a sticking point with  regular probation staff, although as stated by John Podmore, professor of  applied social sciences, ââ¬Å"NOMS was never an organisation that its employees  proudly declared they belonged to.  Creating a National Prison and Probation Service that people aspire to join and importantly to stay in and develop skills and careers is a crucial step forward. But it must be much more than just name changeâ⬠, Podmore (2017). Lizz Truss, current Minister of Justice as of April 2017, was keen to promote the newly created Her Majestyââ¬â¢s Prison and Probation Service with the following à  bold statement, ââ¬Å"The creation of HM Prison and Probation Service (HMPPS), will build a world-leading, specialist agency, dedicated to professionalising the prison and probation workforce, backed by an additional à £100m a year and 2,500 additional prison officers, with a à £1.3 bn budget to build new prisons, whilst at the same time closing old and inefficient prisonsâ⬠, Truss (2017). à    Scepticism may be in the forefronts of most of  the staff affected by the new era dawning, as previous ministers, namely Mr  Gove and Mr Grayling had somewhat seemed to have à  failed in their primary objectives for a  reformed and efficient joined up agency.   Fig.3.Assesemnt of C-NOMIS National Audit Office 2009   The Need for Change  Accounts  of the origins of probation and its realisation in organisational form give different  emphases to its role in social justice, redemption, and control or separation  of ââ¬Ësuspect populationsââ¬â¢ from respectable society (Vanstone, 2004). The history  of the service has frequently been described in terms of ââ¬Ëphasesââ¬â¢, one notable  example suggesting that it moved from the missionary phase through welfare and  diversion from custody phases towards more recent orientations towards  punishment in the community and then public protection (Chui and Nellis, 2003).  The reality of practice is less straightforward, although changes in social and  political norms certainly mean that the problem of offending, and, inevitably,  law-breakers becomes enclosed by practitioners in different terms. Redeemable,  treatable or unmanageable, safe or risky, motivated or unmotivated, (Canton,  2011: 29). With current reference to offender  management stated that , à  rather  than probation supervisionas  the dominant way of describing the work of the probation service is a case in  point. To what extent does this represent a real shift towards a technocratic  and business-like approach? Or does the term seek to mask the essential  continuity in both human interactions between probation officers and  probationers, and the normalising function benevolent or otherwise of  probation?   These  questions are certainly not settled. Yet, in the face of the Transforming Rehabilitationreforms  (MoJ, 2013a: MoJ, 2013b), they become highly significant when we consider the  practices and values that might transfer out of the probation service into the  new Community Rehabilitation Companies (CRCs) ,as staff move from one to the  other. They are also relevant in anticipating what motivations and values might  guide this new version of the NPS, tightly focused on work with higher risk  offenders and in the courts to assist sentencing and enforcement procedures.  From a critical perspective, Cavadino et.al.(2013: 134) fear the ââ¬Ëwithering awayââ¬â¢ of supervision  of probationers and even question the Transforming  Rehabilitation, or transforming the occupational identity of probation workers?  Theory (Desistance)  As far back as the 1800ââ¬â¢s, the French social scientist, Quetelet (1833), argued that the penchant for crime diminishes with age because of what was described as the ââ¬Å"enfeeblement of physical vitalityâ⬠. Given that one of the aims of the Criminal Justice System is to reduce crime, then does Transforming Rehabilitation support this? Desistance is one of the mechanisms that can aid TR, however desistance is a complicated process of many twist and turns on that journey to desist from offending. Transforming Rehabilitation is now well under way and reports on its success will be under much scrutiny in the coming months ahead. Desistance from crime, is described as the long-term abstinence from criminal behaviour among those for whom offending had become a pattern of behaviour, is something of a mystery. Producing or encouraging desistance is the implicit focus of much criminal justice policy, practice and research. It is one of the key outcomes that justice interventions    are designed to achieve and much research treats reducing or ending offending as a key measure of effectiveness, McNeill et. al. (2012).  One  of the few near eventualities in criminal justice is that for many individuals,  offending behaviour peaks in their teenage years, and then starts to decline.  This pattern is represented in what is known as the age crime curve. The age  crime curve is of a symmetrical bell shaped curve that shows the prevalenceââ¬â¢s  of offending, that peaks between the ages of 15 ââ¬â 19 and declines in the 20ââ¬â¢s,  Farrington (1986). Studies of desistance illuminate the processes of change  associated with the age-crime curve (Kazemian, 2007). If we are to understand  desistance from crime, particularly how and why crime tails off over time, we  need both testable theories of this process and empirical evidence. There is a  significant evidence base on the causes of crime but desistance research  suggests that the factors behind the onset of offending are often different than  the factors behind its abandonment. Understanding desistance also has more  subtle impacts on criminal justice debates.  The  most current version of The Good Lives Model, incorporates desistance theory  and also elements of positive psychology Laws and Ward (2011), is strength  based regarding the premise that humans are by nature, practical decision  makers, who invariably adapt themselves to their environment. In relation to  desistance, Maruna (2001), described what he coined the Pygmalion effect,  stated that the elevated expectations of others will lead to a greater self-belief,  aiding the process of ââ¬Ëknifing offââ¬â¢, or cutting off bonds with their criminal  past. In order to achieve these goals, a great deal of emphasis on social capital  or opportunities and human capital or motivations and capacities, McNeill  (2006) are necessary elements to aid primary and secondary desistance. With  respect to the GLM as to its effectiveness, research into this model is rather ambivalent  and rather scarce to date to be able to measure the evidence.  Offender Management Outcomes  Kirton and Guillame (2015), argue that staff  feel that TR has deprofessionalized the service and that stress levels are high, due to higher  workloads, job insecurity, less autonomy and reduced opportunities for training  and progression. Many respondents in their study were considering leaving the  service. Moreover, responses to the  Ministry of Justiceââ¬â¢s (2016) Civil Service People  Surveyfor the NPS suggest  that only a minority of NPS staff feel that they are involved in decisions that  affect their work (38%); that poor performance is dealt with effectively in  their team (35%); that there are learning and development opportunities (42%);  and that there are career opportunities in the NPS (33%).  The  NOMS Offender Management Model is the product of bringing together the policy  requirements and the messages from research and other evidence, and defining  what these together mean for the principles of how NOMS will go about managing  individual offenders. It is the bridge between the broad brush strokes of  policy, and the finer detail of practice. It forms part of NOMSââ¬â¢ commissioning  framework, setting out the broad specification for the approach it expects those  managing individual offenders to deploy, and acting as the basis for the  development of Standards and performance measures, NOMS (2006). Post Carter  report, this was simply a reply from this by concentrating on key themes like  modernisation in the form of New Public Management (NPM), trying to control the  increasing population in the prison system and by trying to find solutions to  the lack of communication between services under the umbrella of probation  supervision and prison and probation.  Payment by Results  Fig.4. Key Components of Fee For Service Mechanism   à  The MOJ sets out the mechanisms of FFS: Fee For  Service (FFS) is payment for mandated activities that deliver through the gate  services, (TTG), the sentence of the court and licence conditions to time and  quality. A recognition that volume risk, that is the risk that providers are  required to deliver services for a larger or smaller number of offenders than  expected has been raised as a serious concern, and therefore the risk needs to  be shared between Government and providers. The FFS component will therefore be  a fixed price for services with a volume related adjustment where changes to  volume levels fall outside of an appropriately determined tolerance range, as  seen in FIig.4. above. This volume tolerance range recognises that the likely  reason for a significantincrease or  decrease in volume is most likely to be due to external factors not within the  control of a provider.  Payment  by Results (PbR) seems to be an ideal mechanism in TR, particularly in the  current economic climate and under a government which is so keen, to reduce  public expenditure, but also to reduce the scale of the public sector, and  innovative because possible failings may allow to transfer the costs to private  companies involved.à   Fox and Albertson  (2011) stated, there are other potential benefits to PbR. The sheer possibility  of making profits is expected to bring new providers into the field. This,  combined with a financial incentive to achieve outcomes, is then expected to  increase competition, sweep away unnecessary bureaucracy, and increase the  desire to innovate. leading to a better understanding of what is effective, possibly  leading to lower unit costs thus allowing for an element of profit to be paid.  This is expected to facilitate the involvement of smaller providers who may not  have the financial resources to sustain a service over several years while  waiting for their results to be evident and their payments to be triggered. In  all, if implemented properly then a huge success for private companies involved  in TR.   Fig.5.Illustration of payment curve incorporating stretch targets.   Managing Risk  One also must bear in mind that the priority given to  different purposes is likely to vary over time. Countries can change their  penal philosophies, with different purposes and emphases being put on the role  of probation within criminal justice. Kemshall (2010) and others, for example,  have argued that, in the last decade or so, more emphasis has been placed on  public protection and minimizing risk in England and Wales, with a linked  priority on enforcement of breach. The governmentââ¬â¢s new consultation document,  ââ¬ËBreaking the cycle: effective punishment, rehabilitation and sentencing of  offendersââ¬â¢ may see a swing back towards rehabilitation and promoting  desistance, whilst promoting community sentences for less serious offences and  without compromising public protection (Ministry of Justice 2010).   Fig.6.Prochaska and DiClementeââ¬â¢s Cycle of Change Model   Conclusion  Lessons  from the Thatcher government (1979ââ¬â1990) taught us that her government targeted  the large public sector organisations involved in the provision of utilities  whom they presented as being inefficient, over-bureaucratic and unresponsive  because they were not subjected to the ââ¬Ëdisciplineââ¬â¢ of the market, such as the  prison service. However, there was also the realisation that selling those  public entities, who were profitable by virtue of their monopoly position,  afforded a short-term opportunity to raise revenues, lower taxation and reduce  public sector borrowing, now seen again in a Conservative government, Annison  et.al. (2014). Do we state the obvious or is it a case of Deja vou? In this  respect, it is worth remembering that earlier initiatives introduced by the  previous Labour government to address this issue ââ¬â such as the NOMS and Custody  Plus3 were subsequently abandoned on the grounds of the costs involved.  At  the heart of the governmentââ¬â¢s TR rhetoric is the idea of innovation, however as  in some cases a phone call every 6 weeks from a CRC to a low risk offender may  not be seen this way. TR has been communicated from the top down as an  opportunity for providers of probation services to liberate themselves from  central control and develop creative, effective solutions to the problem of  reoffending (Ministry of Justice 2013a; 2013b).  à  The  question of perceptual legitimacy, internal, external, and self- legitimacy has  become a core site of debate for probation. Bradford and Quintonââ¬â¢s (2014)  conditions for self-legitimacy, namely levels of attachment to the new organizations,  the internalization of organizational goals, a sense of being supported by the organization,  and a belief that probation staff in both the CRCs and the NPS remain  legitimate holders of authority.  As David Cameron once remarked  whilst Prime Minister, ââ¬Ëfinding diamonds in the rough and letting them shineââ¬â¢.  With effective rehabilitation methods in place and joined up working  principles, maybe optimistically, we just might see many shining lights, and  hail the implementation of Transforming Rehabilitation.   References  Annison, J., Burke, L. and Senior, P. (2014),  ââ¬ËTransforming Rehabilitation: Another Example of English ââ¬ËExceptionalismââ¬â¢ or a  Blueprint for the Rest of Europe?ââ¬â¢ European Journal of Probation, 6: 6ââ¬â23.  Bradford, B. and Quinton, P.  (2014) ââ¬â¢Self-legitimacy, police culture and support for democratic policing in  an English constabularyââ¬â¢, British Journal  of Criminology, 54, 1023ââ¬â46.  Canton, R. (2011) Probation: Working with offenders  Abingdon: Routledge  Cavadino, M., Dignan, J. and  Mair, G. (2013) The penal system: An introduction London: Sage.  Chui, W.H. and Nellis, M. (2003) ââ¬ËCreating the National  Probation Service ââ¬â new wine, old bottles? In W.H. Chui, and M. Nellis (eds) Moving  probation forward: Evidence, arguments and practice Harlow: Pearson.  Deering, J. and Feilzer, M.Y.  (2015) Privatizing Probation: Is  Transforming Rehabilitation the End of the Probation Ideal? Bristol: Policy  Press.  Farrington, D.P (1986) ââ¬ËAge and crimeââ¬â¢ in Tonry, M. and  Morris, N. (Eds) Crime and justice: An annual review of research Vol 7,  pp189-250.  Fox, C. and Albertson, K. (2011)  Payment by results and social impact bonds in the criminal justice sector: New  challenges for the concept of evidence-based policy?, Criminology & Criminal Justice, 11 (5) 395-413.  Kemshall, H. (2010). ââ¬ËThe role of risk, needs and  strengths assessment in improving supervisionââ¬â¢, in F. McNeill, P. Raynor and C.  Trotter (eds.) Offender supervision: new  directions in theory, research and practice. Abingdon: Willan.  Kirton, G., and Guillaume, C., (2015). Employment Relations and Working Conditions in Probation after Transforming Rehabilitation. Available at: https//www.napo.org.uk/advice-and -resource(Accessed 24 April 2017).  Looman, J., & Abracen, J. (2013). The risk need  responsivity model of offender rehabilitation: Is there really a need for a  paradigm shift?à  International Journal of Behavioral Consultation and  Therapy, 8(3-4), 30-36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/h0100980  McNeill, F. (2011) ââ¬ËProbation, Credibility and Justiceââ¬â¢ in  Probation Journal Vol 58(1): 9-22  McNeill, F., Farrall, S., Lightowler, C., and Maruna, S.  (2012) How and why people stop offending: discovering desistance. Other.  Institute for Research and Innovation in Social Services.  Maruna, S. (2001). Making good: How ex-convicts reform  and rebuild their lives. Washington D.C.: American Psychological  Association.  Ministry of Justice (2010). Breaking the cycle: effective punishment, rehabilitation and sentencing  of offenders.à   London: Ministry of  Justice.  Ministry of Justice (2013a) Transforming  Rehabilitation: A Strategy for Reform London: MoJ.  Ministry of Justice (2013b) Transforming  Rehabilitation: Target operating model, rehabilitation programme London:  MoJ.  Ministry of Justice (2016) Civil Service People Survey 2016:à   The National Probation Service.https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/  file/573656/nps-people-survery-results-2016.pdf (accessed 26 April 2016).  National Audit Office (2002), Reducing Prisoner Reoffending.  Ostrom,  E. (1986). An Agenda for the Study of Institutions. Public Choice. 48(1): 3-25.  Podmore,  J., (2017). http://thejusticegap.com/2017/02/farewell-noms-need-name-change/.  Website [accessed 24 April 2017].   Social  Exclusion Unit (2002). Reducing Re-offending by ex -Prisoners.  Vanstone,  M. (2004) Supervising offenders in the community: A history of probation  theory and practice Aldershot: Ashgate.  Bibliography  Fig.1. CPA Map showing the 21 Contract Package Areas  Fig2. System Governance  Fig.3.Assesemnt of C-NOMIS National Audit Office 2009  Fig.4. Key Components of Fee for Service Mechanism  Fig.5.Illustration of payment curve incorporating  stretch targets.  Fig.6.Prochaska and DiClementeââ¬â¢s Cycle of Change Model    
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