By Professor David V Williams
An open letter to Minister of Corrections Judith Collins
I WRITE to in regard to your decision, and reported comments, concerning the standing down of Ngapari Nui as a kaiwhakamana supporting Maori in prisons.
As I understand the position you have taken, it is a matter of principle that any person with any affiliations whatsoever to a "gang" such as Black Power or Mangu Kaha should have no contact with prison inmates. I am also led to believe from news reports that your decision is based on evidence.
My inquiry is what is the evidence to which you refer? What evidence is there that a person of about 58 years in age with no convictions for some 30 years, who has the support of iwi leaders, the local MP (himself a former policeman and an MP for your own National Party), and respected community leaders such as Dame Tariana Turia, might be anything other than helpful in performing the duties of a kaiwhakamana in prisons?
What exactly is the principle you invoke? If it be that any affiliation with a "gang", however historic, results in an absolute ban on performing a role in prison programmes, then I would submit that the principle is misplaced.
Indeed, I would suggest that, in the case of carefully selected individuals, the opposite conclusion should be reached. Those who know the gang subculture from the inside (from when they were young) would be far better placed to make constructive pro-social connections with inmates than persons with good intentions but no life experiences of the circumstances of gang subcultures and social deprivation.
On the question of evidence, I also have a broader concern.
It is often alleged that Maori are hugely over-represented in the prison population, and that gang members are especially over-represented in the prison population. I am aware of numerous reports on the over-representation of Maori in prisons that compare the proportion of Maori in prisons with the proportion of Maori in the total population. That is a less than useful comparison.
Criminological research literature from around the world consistently finds that prison populations are almost exclusively drawn from young males in the poorest sections of the community with the greatest levels of poverty and family dysfunction. Those socio-economic circumstances are also tightly linked to recruitment of young males into groups that provide some support for them but also engage in criminal activity of the sort the police forces focus their attention on.
Do you have evidence that Maori gang members are a disproportionate segment of the population when compared with the total of socio-economically deprived young males in the national population -- rather than as compared with the total population as a whole?
If your focus -- and that of the Sensible Sentencing Trust -- is to impose a blanket ban on all persons who have "gang" affiliations regardless of their record of community and iwi service, what is the evidence that this will reduce the increasing rates of incarceration in New Zealand prisons?
If your focus is on undermining the appeal of gangs for vulnerable young men who may well commit crimes, then surely government policies should be directed to poverty reduction and community development. Properly implemented, coordinated policies along the lines of Whanau Ora programmes should have the benefit of promoting wellbeing in our poorest communities -- including those many Maori young men who suffer the effects of child poverty and disempowerment but do not commit crimes.
Meanwhile, I submit, the Corrections Department should spend time and effort in recruiting more persons such as Ngapari Nui to be kaiwhakamana in the prisons, rather than standing them down.
�Professor David V. Williams is a law teacher at the University of Auckland and former student at Wanganui Collegiate School whose family farmed at Marangai on No1 Line.