Maconochie's Gentlemen: The Story of Norfolk Island and the Roots of Modern Prison Reform

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Oxford University Press, 2003年9月11日 - 251 頁
In 1840, Alexander Maconochie, a privileged retired naval captain, became at his own request superintendent of two thousand twice-convicted prisoners on Norfolk Island, a thousand miles off the coast of Australia. In four years, Maconochie transformed what was one of the most brutal convict settlements in history into a controlled, stable, and productive environment that achieved such success that upon release his prisoners came to be called "Maconochie's Gentlemen". Here Norval Morris, one of our most renowned criminologists, offers a highly inventive and engaging account of this early pioneer in penal reform, enhancing Maconochie's life story with a trenchant policy twist. Maconochie's life and efforts on Norfolk Island, Morris shows, provide a model with profound relevance to the running of correctional institutions today. Using a unique combination of fictionalized history and critical commentary, Morris gives this work a powerful policy impact lacking in most standard academic accounts. In an era of "mass incarceration" that rivals that of the settlement of Australia, Morris injects the question of humane treatment back into the debate over prison reform. Maconochie and his "Marks system" played an influential role in the development of prisons; but for the last thirty years prison reform has been dominated by punitive and retributive sentiments, the conventional wisdom holding that we need 'supermax' prisons to control the 'worst of the worst' in solitary and harsh conditions. Norval Morris argues to the contrary, holding up the example of Alexander Maconochie as a clear-cut alternative to the "living hell" of prison systems today.

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NORFOLK ISLAND 18401844
1
MACONOCHIE AND NORFOLK ISLAND AFTER 1844
161
WHY Do PRISON CONDITIONS MATTER?
171
CONTEMPORARY LESSONS FROM MACONOCHIES EXPERIMENT
177
Fixed or Indeterminate Sentences and Good Time
178
Graduated Release Procedures and Aftercare
195
The Worst of the Worst
197
Punishment and the Mentally Ill
203
Deterrence Rehabilitation and Prison Conditions
208
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第 84 頁 - Greenwich about — , being represented as a spot which may hereafter become useful, you are, as soon as circumstances will admit of it, to send a small establishment thither to secure the same to us, and prevent it being occupied by the subjects of any other European power...
第 40 頁 - They are locked up from sunset to sunrise in the caravans or boxes used for this description of persons, which hold from 20 to 28 men, but in which the whole number can neither stand upright nor sit down at the same time (except with their legs at right angles to their bodies), and which, in some instances, do not allow more than 18 inches in width for each individual to lie down upon...
第 28 頁 - Pitt, at the height of 3000 feet above the level of the sea. The establishment consists of a spacious quadrangle of buildings for the prisoners, the military barracks, and a series of offices in two ranges. A little further beyond, on a green mound of Nature's beautiful making, rises the mansion of the Commandant, with its barred windows, defensive cannon, and pacing sentry.
第 xx 頁 - But individuals thus sacrificed to what is, at best, but a high political expediency (for vengeance belongs to another) have their claims on us also, claims only the more sacred because they are helpless in our hands, and thus helpless we condemn them for our own advantage. We have no right to cast them away altogether. Even their physical suffering should be in moderation, and the moral pain we must and ought to inflict with it should be carefully framed so as if possible to reform, and not necessarily...
第 75 頁 - Land, On the Square, Ever. Stiff or in Breath, Lag or Free, You and Me, In Life, in Death, On the Cross, never.
第 175 頁 - Penitentiaries, in the hands of wise men, may be rendered excellent institutions ; but a prison must be a prison — a place of sorrow and wailing ; which should be entered with horror, and quitted with earnest resolution never to return to such misery ; with that deep impression, in short, of the evil which breaks out into perpetual warning and exhortation to others.
第 40 頁 - ... the bare boards ; they are kept to work under a strict military guard during the day, and liable to suffer flagellation for trifling offences, such as an exhibition of obstinacy, insolence, and the like...
第 xx 頁 - ... would not be understood to pronounce an absolute and unqualified condemnation), but they are decidedly of opinion that it would be advisable to ascertain, by experiment, the effect of establishing a system of reward and punishment not founded merely upon the prospect of immediate pain or immediate gratification, but relying mainly upon the effect to be produced by the hope of obtaining or the fear of losing future and distant advantages. At present order and discipline...
第 ix 頁 - It is curious, but till that moment I had never realized what it means to destroy a healthy, conscious man. When I saw the prisoner step aside to avoid the puddle I saw the mystery, the unspeakable wrongness, of cutting a life short when it is in full tide.
第 175 頁 - Smith, a follower of the deterrence theory, said a prison should be "a place of punishment, from which men recoil with horror — a place of real suffering painful to the memory, terrible to the imagination ... a place of sorrow and wailing, which should be entered with horror and quitted with earnest resolution never to return to such misery . . .

關於作者 (2003)

Norval Morris is Julius Kreeger Professor of Law and Criminology at the University of Chicago. He is the editor of The Oxford History of the Prison and the author of The Brothel Boy and Other Parables of the Law. In 2000, he received both the American Society of Criminology's Edwin E. Sutherland Award and the National Council of Crime and Delinquency's Donald Cressey Award.

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