THE PROBATION SYSTEM.
A SATISFACTORY RESPONSE,
CHIEF REVIEW.
to Daily Times.)
WELLINGTON, August 28.
Xhe report of the chief probation officer was presented to Parliament today. Mr Dallard states that it is 43 years since the system was initiated in New Zealand. Last year the system was made more effective by the establishment of voluntary committees somewhat on the lines of the Imperial Criminal Justice Act, 1925. Reports from probation officers show that in the great majority of cases probationers have satisfactorily responded to the method of treatment. The depressed economic conditions and the amount of unemployment, however, have made rehabilitation more difficult, but assistance from voluntary helpers haS to some extent overcome this difficulty. The total number of offenders placed under the supervision of the probation officers was 750. There in a decrease shown in the number of offenders admitted to probation, regarding which the officer states that apparently the courts, in an effort to suppress the growth of delinquency among adolescents, have had recourse to a more deterrent method of treatment than probation. In Auckland, Christchurch and Dunedin there have been several youthful criminals gangs whose exploits have ranged from motor car thefts to burglaries, and it has been with the object of breaking up these combinations that the youthful gangsters have been sent for terms of discipline and training to the Borstal institutions.
Mr Dallard states that the effectiveness of the probation system is mainly contingent upon the earnestness witn which it is carried out. If probation Is to. be really constructive it is essential that close and persistent attention shall be given to each case.
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Bibliographic details
Otago Daily Times, Issue 20499, 29 August 1928, Page 2
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269THE PROBATION SYSTEM. Otago Daily Times, Issue 20499, 29 August 1928, Page 2
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