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Simone Bull paper.pdf - Rethinking Crime and Punishment

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Changing the broken record: New theory <strong>and</strong> data on Maori offending<br />

<strong>Simone</strong> <strong>Bull</strong><br />

Introduction<br />

Despite being experts in criminal justice, when we gauged how well we know<br />

Maori representation in the criminal justice system at the recent IPS evidence<br />

forum, our knowledge was shown to be seriously lacking. This is reflected in<br />

the sparse literature on the topic.<br />

Existing theory<br />

Few explanations for the seemingly high levels of offending by Māori have<br />

been the object of rigorous research in New Zeal<strong>and</strong> - although many have<br />

been the subject of "rigorous assertion" (Stenning, 2005).<br />

Over the past century, the volume of literature generated by Maori offending is<br />

such that you could list most of the references on one page. The drivers of<br />

crime specified in that literature range from atavism to tradition <strong>and</strong> cultural<br />

mores; urbanisation, cultural discontinuity, failed integration, acculturation<br />

stress, social disorganisation, <strong>and</strong> lifestyle instability; primary <strong>and</strong> secondary<br />

culture conflicts; colonial injustices, institutional racism, tradition corrupted,<br />

cultural denigration <strong>and</strong> powerlessness; poor education outcomes (sometimes<br />

involving glue ear) <strong>and</strong> socio-economic deprivation; whānau alienation, stress,<br />

alcohol <strong>and</strong> drug abuse; necessity, excitement, consumerism; politicisation<br />

<strong>and</strong> decolonisation; <strong>and</strong>, most recently, trapped lifestyles (complex interplay<br />

between socio-economic variables, confused or partially developed cultural<br />

identities, <strong>and</strong> individual <strong>and</strong> collective experiences).<br />

Bias <strong>and</strong> the age structure of the population have also been identified as<br />

critical issues for Maori. But, I view them not as explanations of offending so<br />

much as [partial] explanations of the extent of Maori representation in the<br />

criminal justice system (though General Strain Theory does posit bias as a<br />

motivation for crime).<br />

I don’t have the space here to review or critique this literature. At the risk of<br />

over-simplifying, I want to focus on key themes.<br />

Key theme 1: Maori 'over-representation' is the wrong paradigm<br />

The bulk of published literature on the causes of Maori offending consists of<br />

general (as opposed to offence-specific) theories that try to explain all Maori<br />

offending. Most start with the observation that Maori are over-represented in<br />

the criminal justice system, <strong>and</strong> work from there. But, how robust is this claim?<br />

On the surface, it seems valid. While making up only 15% of the general<br />

population, Maori currently comprise 40-45% of all Police apprehensions.<br />

Therefore, Māori are over-represented in the criminal justice system. On the<br />

other h<strong>and</strong>, this view of Maori over-representation ignores the roles played by<br />

known criminogenic factors. Rather than compare the proportion of Māori<br />

apprehensions to the proportion of Māori in the general population, for<br />

example, we should examine whether the proportion of Māori who are young,


male, unmarried, unemployed, uneducated, in subst<strong>and</strong>ard housing, is<br />

reflected in the apprehension statistics. Rates of recorded offending, <strong>and</strong><br />

hence imprisonment, are well known to depend on a range of social<br />

development factors (Braithwaite, 1989), rather than raw population<br />

proportions. But, we have never undertaken research to test whether Maori<br />

are still over-represented in the criminal justice system once you control for<br />

known criminogenic variables.<br />

Key theme 2: Perceptions of Maori offending are distorted<br />

It is my conjecture that, as far as our perceptions of Maori offending are<br />

concerned, reality has been overtaken by stereotypes <strong>and</strong> assorted<br />

misinformation much of which is generated by corporate media. In the book<br />

Simulacra <strong>and</strong> Simulation (1995), French social theorist Jean Baudrillard<br />

refers to this state of affairs as hyper-reality. Unfortunately, this hyper-reality<br />

(rather than a sound evidence base) has become the starting point for much<br />

research <strong>and</strong> policy. Our ability to correct this requires us to fully utilise the<br />

available evidence.<br />

Key theme 3: Existing data is under-utilised<br />

Braithwaite (1989) identified 13 powerful associations that all general theories<br />

of crime need to account for. These include, for example, the observation that<br />

80% of reported offending is committed by males, <strong>and</strong> that crime is<br />

disproportionately committed by those aged between 15 <strong>and</strong> 25 years. In New<br />

Zeal<strong>and</strong>, the data needed to characterise Maori representation in the criminal<br />

justice system along these lines, has been publicly available on the Statistics<br />

New Zeal<strong>and</strong> website for over 10 years. That data is rarely utilised in depth.<br />

Key theme 4: The research record is sparse<br />

Part of the problem with theorising about Maori offending is that the research<br />

record is discontinuous – we never take one theory <strong>and</strong> thoroughly test,<br />

enhance or re-examine it in light of new evidence. We just wait a few years for<br />

another to come along – usually from overseas. Although the record may<br />

seem broad it has little depth, <strong>and</strong> is actually small compared to other topics in<br />

criminal justice.<br />

Status quo<br />

Notwithst<strong>and</strong>ing the failure to account for Maori offence profiles, prevailing<br />

opinion seems to be divided between those who see socio-economic<br />

deprivation as key among numerous developmental <strong>and</strong>/or life course risk<br />

factors (trajectory <strong>and</strong> risk theorists), <strong>and</strong> those who see it as stemming from<br />

broad social inequalities (critical <strong>and</strong> counter-colonial criminologists). At<br />

present, no one is joining the two together though the connection seems<br />

obvious: colonisation generated broad social inequalities leading to<br />

deprivation, the deprivation causes the crime, causes the inequality, causes<br />

the deprivation.<br />

Of course, all of this is of very little help (or interest, probably) to the victims<br />

<strong>and</strong> offenders who find themselves caught up in the criminal justice system.<br />

While we wait for existing theory to be enhanced in light of better data, <strong>and</strong>/or<br />

for new theory to be developed, there is scope for using the data that we do<br />

have to initiate primary crime prevention initiatives where they are most


needed. However, their efficacy rests on the assumption that much offending<br />

is opportunistic, that is, it occurs on the spur of the moment without<br />

premeditation or planning. The basic idea, famously demonstrated by Mayhew<br />

et al., 1976), is that crime can be prevented by reducing opportunities for it to<br />

occur, using techniques developed under the rubric of situational crime<br />

prevention. Obviously, this does not address the underlying drivers of<br />

offending. But this may not be necessary for the large majority of people<br />

whose offending only occurs during adolescence.<br />

According to the data, then, what characteristics of volume crime among<br />

Māori are in most need of being addressed?<br />

'New' data<br />

In the most recent fiscal year, 2007/08, we know that 79% of all<br />

apprehensions of Māori were of males (72,186 out of 91,944), in accordance<br />

with the general rule that females are responsible for roughly 20% of reported<br />

offences.<br />

We can narrow the bulk of Maori apprehensions down to a relatively small<br />

number of offence classes/types. It is important to note, however, that family<br />

violence-related offending cuts across several different offence classes. When<br />

collated (n=17,106), it exceeds all of the individual offence classes/types<br />

noted above.<br />

There are some variations on this theme when the data is broken down by<br />

age/gender (excl family violence). For example, shoplifting accounts for 50%<br />

of 0-9 year old Maori girls' apprehensions <strong>and</strong> 25% of 0-9 year old Maori boys'<br />

apprehensions. "Disorder" <strong>and</strong> "assaults" tend to feature more prominently<br />

from 17 years of age onwards, as access to alcohol increases.<br />

Police apprehensions of Māori males <strong>and</strong> females are disproportionately of<br />

those aged between 14 <strong>and</strong> 30 years (see graph below). However, the age<br />

profiles do vary by offence category (as well as class <strong>and</strong> type). Age


distributions of traffic apprehensions are slightly more skewed toward the<br />

older age brackets, reflecting children <strong>and</strong> young peoples' relatively limited<br />

access to vehicles.<br />

In 2007/08 (<strong>and</strong> preceding years), the Police areas with the highest volumes<br />

of Maori apprehensions were: Hamilton city, Waitakere, Western Bay of<br />

Plenty, Whangarei, Rotorua, Auckl<strong>and</strong> city central, with some variations by<br />

age <strong>and</strong> gender. Generally, the further south you go, the lower the volume of<br />

Maori apprehensions.<br />

On converting apprehension volumes into “crude” apprehension rates 1 a more<br />

classical picture is obtained. Auckl<strong>and</strong> city has the highest rate of<br />

apprehensions at 1,322 apprehensions per 1,000 Māori with Christchurch<br />

central a distant second on 432 apprehensions per 1,000 Maori (the picture is<br />

broadly the same irrespective of gender, though the extent of the problem is<br />

worse for males). The conjecture is that the two rate hotspots are driven by<br />

commuters rather than residents. The question then becomes: From how far a<br />

field are these offenders travelling?<br />

Over the past 10 years, diversions have remained fairly steady at 1-2% of all<br />

resolutions. In 2007/08, Maori had the lowest proportion of cases resolved via<br />

diversion at 0.6%, while "Asiatics" had the highest (5.9%) - suggesting a<br />

possible model for good practice. Prosecutions have increased from 59% to<br />

69% overall <strong>and</strong> warnings/cautions have dropped from 22% to 16%. 71% of<br />

Maori (<strong>and</strong> "Pacific Isle") apprehensions are resolved by prosecution, 13% by<br />

warnings/cautions. For "Caucasians", the corresponding figures are 66% <strong>and</strong><br />

18%. Ethnic discrepancies in offence resolutions between Maori <strong>and</strong><br />

"Caucasians" appear most pronounced among 14-16 yr olds.<br />

1 Using 2006 census population data broken down by age, gender, ethnicity <strong>and</strong> Police area we can calculate a<br />

"crude" rate by dividing the total number of apprehensions by the population figures <strong>and</strong> multiplying by (say) 1,000. It<br />

is "crude" because it is assumes that each apprehension represents a discrete offender when we know that some<br />

offenders are responsible for multiple apprehensions.


Road policing data is particularly important to Maori offence profiles because<br />

"drink driving" is a driver of the Maori prison population. Ethnicity data is not<br />

recorded in a lot of traffic-related apprehensions. But where we do have the<br />

information, it reveals that drink driving dominates the four highest volume<br />

offence types for Maori. This is more so for Maori females (45%) than males<br />

(34%), <strong>and</strong> varies even more by age. Among Maori females aged 21-30, drink<br />

driving comprises 76% of the apprehensions for the four key offence types. By<br />

Police area, the highest volume of Maori traffic apprehensions were in the Far<br />

North, Western Bay of Plenty, Whangarei, Rotorua, CM central, CM south,<br />

Hamilton city, Gisborne, Hastings, Waitakere.<br />

Making the most of available evidence<br />

Most of us would have no difficulty in acknowledging the sources below as<br />

evidence. Yet, despite the shortage of Maori-specific evidence on offer, we<br />

rarely use all of these sources, let alone collectively.<br />

6 monthly Maori apprehensions dataset (SNZ)<br />

some analysis of NZCASS Maori findings (MoJ) available later in 2009,<br />

<strong>and</strong> triennially at best<br />

unpublished findings of TPK (assisted by MoJ, MWA, <strong>and</strong> Corrections)<br />

engagement with Maori providers, practitioners & offenders (2007)<br />

Moana Jackson’s colloquium (2008) <strong>and</strong> subsequent report (2009)<br />

longitudinal studies (ongoing)<br />

infrequent publications from Maori criminologists (Tauri, Webb, myself)<br />

I think we could also agree that we need many more than this if we are to<br />

address Maori offending. So, how do we generate more evidence?<br />

Not by looking offshore to theory constructed without reference to the local<br />

context. If we accept that all knowledge is socially constructed, <strong>and</strong> that what<br />

makes one point of view acceptable at any one time is not that it is more<br />

truthful than another but that it is backed by greater power resources, then I<br />

believe we must look to popular culture as a source of evidence. The views of<br />

very few people find expression in academic literature <strong>and</strong> policy circles. This<br />

is especially true for Maori. According to the 1996 Adult Literacy survey, 70%<br />

of Maori [45% of non-Maori] have literacy skills below what is regarded as the<br />

minimum level required to meet the "complex dem<strong>and</strong>s of everyday life <strong>and</strong><br />

work" in the emerging "knowledge society". More perspectives are heard in<br />

song lyrics, films, poetry, novels, biographies – the matatini performing arts<br />

festival is a classic example of this. Great Maori composers like Tuini Ngawai<br />

<strong>and</strong> her niece Ngoi Pewhairangi provided extensive commentary on a broad<br />

range of social, political <strong>and</strong> cultural issues through the performing arts. And<br />

their work was intimately linked with the Kotahitanga movement. I am not<br />

suggesting uncritical acceptance of this material, but what Clifford Geertz<br />

describes as analysis that searches for meaning, measured by the<br />

consistency <strong>and</strong> coherence of “thick description”.


Responding to offending by Maori<br />

There is no wonder drug for responding to Maori offending. Instead, there is a<br />

choice we all need to make. We can stick with the status quo, tinker at the<br />

fringes with ad hoc policy <strong>and</strong> research, jealously guarding our territory as<br />

though we have a monopoly on expertise <strong>and</strong> competence. But theory not<br />

based on robust evidence, which is what I propose we are relying too heavily<br />

upon, is guesswork (no matter how well educated). And guesswork,<br />

demonstrably, has a low probability of success.<br />

Or, we can start afresh, <strong>and</strong> engage with ALL of the available evidence,<br />

perhaps even invest in independent Maori research aligned to a proper<br />

characterisation of "the problem". We can use it to tell us where, when, how<br />

<strong>and</strong> with whom we need to make an impact if we are to reduce Maori<br />

offending <strong>and</strong> victimization. And we can work with the people who are directly<br />

affected by it, preferably while Maori offence profiles are relatively minor <strong>and</strong><br />

concentrated in few offence classes/types (i.e. before they reach the adult<br />

jurisdiction), to develop solutions.<br />

Whatever we do, unless it changes Maori criminal justice data, is ultimately<br />

doomed. Why? Because corporate media are wedded to crime news. As long<br />

as that crime news casts Maori in a consistently negative light, the discourse<br />

surrounding Maori crime won’t change; therefore nor will Maori criminal<br />

justice outcomes. As Foucault (cited in Davidson, 1997) famously said,<br />

discourse is not merely a surface inscription. It brings about effects.<br />

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