'Inspection, the only effective instrument of reformative management': Bentham, surveillance, and convict recidivism in early New South Wales

Author(s)
Allen, Matthew
Roberts, David Andrew
Publication Date
2022-04-28
Abstract
<p>In 1802–3, Jeremy Bentham produced an extended critique of penal transportation in general, and of the colony of New South Wales in particular, in a series of public letters to the Home Secretary, Lord Pelham.<sup>1</sup> By that date Bentham had been advocating for the construction of panopticon penitentiaries under his management for over a decade. On this occasion his tirade was inspired by a Home Office review which found that the 'improved state' of the colony made his proposals unnecessary.<sup>2</sup> Dissenting strongly from the Home Office's position, Bentham argued that New South Wales was inferior to imprisonment, especially in a panopticon, in relation to five 'ends of penal justice'. These were: setting an 'Example' to others, 'Reformation' of the offender, preventing recidivism through 'Incapacitation', providing ‘Compensation’ to the victim, and ensuring 'Economy' for the state.<sup>3</sup> In particular he stressed that 'Inspection' was 'the only effective instrument of reformative management’, and he contrasted the 'frequent and regular inspection' of penitentiaries in general, perfected in his ideal panopticon, with the penal colony's 'radical incapacity of being combined with any efficient system of inspection'.<sup>4</sup> In his view, the nature of convict life and labour in the distant colony made systematic surveillance impossible, not least because it depended on the rigour of private masters who were not subject to meaningful oversight.<sup>5</sup> Drawing on David Collins's published accounts of the colony, Bentham found abundant evidence that '<i>reformation</i> [was] replaced in New South Wales by <i>corruption</i>' and that this explained the persistent viciousness and criminality of the convicts.<sup>6</sup> Concern about reform and recidivism was thus essential to his attack on the penal colony.<sup>7</sup>
Citation
Jeremy Bentham and Australia: Convicts, utility and empire, p. 137-161
ISBN
9781787358188
9781787358201
9781787358195
9781787358218
9781787358225
Link
Language
en
Publisher
University College London Press (UCL Press)
Edition
1
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International
Title
'Inspection, the only effective instrument of reformative management': Bentham, surveillance, and convict recidivism in early New South Wales
Type of document
Book Chapter
Entity Type
Publication

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