Pubdate: Thu, 23 Oct 2008 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Jerry Paradis Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08.n942.a02.html HARPER SIMPLY IGNORING WHAT CRIMINOLOGISTS SAY The letter is written in response -- and in opposition to -- Peter McKnight's views on the Harper government's crime policy ("War on crime and drugs more hopeful than realistic," Oct. 15) reflect the lack of clarity that seems to dominate the issue. This is best illustrated by the one by Marilyn Baker (Oct. 20). She says McKnight "sneers at Harper for stating that people who work in ivory towers might be wrong." She reads his column as insisting that the work of those experts "proves that in-creasing prison time doesn't work." Finally, she cites that last word on everything, the book Freakonomics, in support of the proposition that increased punishment lowers crime rates. What McKnight said is that Harper is pursuing crime and punishment policy without considering the experts at all. Harper has not, to my knowledge, cited any aspect of current or historical thought on the subject and suggested it might be wrong. He has simply ignored it, along with the considered views of his own ministry of justice. More bedevilling is the question of what "works" and what doesn't. There is no doubt that incarceration incapacitates: People in prison are not in a position to commit more crimes and, in some cases, that should be the overriding aim. In that sense, it works. But there is also no doubt that imprisonment has no impact on deterrence, either personal or general, or on recidivism. In that sense, it doesn't work. That's what hundreds of studies, by people with PhDs in criminology, by royal commissions here and elsewhere and by government-created commisssions in the United States, have concluded. More specifically, while the certainty of punishment is a deterrent, the certainty of increased punishment -- e.g., mandatory minimums -- has been repeatedly shown to be counterproductive, arbitrary and enormously costly while having no discernible impact on crime rates. Whatever the "impressive statistics" in Freakonomics may be, they would have to displace that enormous body of research. Jerry Paradis Judge of the Provincial Court of B.C. (retired) North Vancouver - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin