This clip starts approximately 6 minutes into the documentary.
We see a gate open inwards to reveal a concrete courtyard with some stark buildings behind. Interview with Father Peter Norden, Jesuit Social Services. We see the silhouette of a man at a window walk down a prison corridor. There are flags with business logos on them beside Australian flags. We see male prisoners in recreational settings. Then the razor wire and fences on the perimeter of a prison. We also see the inhabited cells of the prison. There is music through the first half of the clip, we hear a female voice singing over a piano with slow drum beat.
Father Peter Norden Well, in Australia, there are some very significant differences in the operation of the private prisons than in the United States. For a start, nationally, 20% of our prison cells are now in the hands of private operators, whereas in the United States, it’s certainly less than 5%.
Pauline Spencer, lawyer US-based companies, Corrections Corporation of America and Wackenhut Corrections, dominate the market. They run through their subsidiaries, Corrections Corporation of Australia and Australasian Correctional Management. A third, UK based company, Group 4, also manages, builds and designs prisons in Australia.
Interview with Barrister Richard Bourke, Secretary, Criminal Bar Association.
Richard Bourke, barrister Victoria is actually engaged in an extraordinary experiment in privatisation. We’ve thrown ourselves into it with more gusto than any other area of the world. We’ve now got – I think we’re now over 50% of the prisoners in custody in Victoria are privatised, and it’s not just the prisons that are privatised. The holding cells are being privatised. Prisoner transport is being privatised. All of the health and educational services for prisoners are apt to be provided by private service providers. The entire system is being moved out of public control into the private realm.
Interview with Professor Richard Harding Director Crime Research Centre, University of Western Australia.
Professor Richard Harding, UWA One of the factors which causes there to be an open door, really, for people urging privatisation is the vast expansion in prison populations that has occurred in many parts of the world.
Interview with Pauline Spencer, Lawyer, Fitzroy Legal Service.
Pauline Spencer What we’re seeing in Victoria is part of a nationwide trend. The law and order agenda is whipped up by politicians. It’s easy for them to sell around election time. They don’t have to solve the real problems, they just have to beat the law and order drum.
Audiovisual montage of news grabs with people, police and politicians, newspaper reports and protest rallies with a crime and punishment theme.
Woman Where do you stand on mandatory sentencing?
Man 1 Three strikes and you are in.
Man 2 What the community wants, as well as punishment…
Man 3 The Aboriginal legal service today…
Man 4 These people are being kept by our money.
Reporter Both sides of politics deny they’re trying to outbid each other on law and order.
Bob Carr There should be no second chance.
We see a young man entering a courtroom. Interview with Professor Richard Harding.
Professor Richard Harding Crime policy is full of all sorts of unsustainable claims. One of them is that high rates of imprisonment reduce crime. They don’t.