Professor David Green University of New York (USA) American Protestantism and the prospects of penal reform

Thursday January 10th, 2013  8.30am – 4pm  Tannock Hall  Notre Dame University  Croke Street, Fremantle      INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON PRISON POP...
Author: Byron Park
2 downloads 0 Views 411KB Size
Thursday January 10th, 2013  8.30am – 4pm  Tannock Hall  Notre Dame University  Croke Street, Fremantle     

INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON PRISON POPULATIONS Crime Research Centre Faculty of Law University of Western Australia  

8.30am – 9.10am  9.10am – 9.20am 

9.20am – 9.30am 

9.30am – 10.00am 

10.00am – 10.30am 

Registration and Tea/Coffee/Muffins on arrival    Welcome and Introduction      Welcome To Country      Professor David Green University of New York (USA)  “American Protestantism and the prospects of penal reform” 

Professor Sonja Snacken Free University of Brussels (Belgium)  “The relationship between democracy and human rights”    10.30am – 11.00am  CHAIRED DISCUSSION      11.00am – 11.30am  Morning Tea and Coffee     11.30am – 12.00noon  Professor Susanne Karstedt University of Leeds (UK)  “The contingencies of democracy: solidarity and punishment”    12.00noon – 12.30pm  Professor John Pratt Victoria University of Wellington (NZ)  “Penal populism and why a society like New Zealand got such a bad dose of it”    12.30pm – 1.00pm  CHAIRED DISCUSSION      1.00pm – 2.00pm  Lunch Break – BYO lunch or purchase at Fisherman’s Wharf (short stroll)     2.00pm – 2.30pm  Professor Anthony Doob University of Toronto (Canada)  “The over‐representation of Aboriginal people in Canada’s prisons”    2.30pm – 3.00pm  Dr Hilde Tubex University of Western Australia   “State of the art: The Future Fellowship”    CHAIRED DISCUSSION  3.00pm – 3.30pm    3.30pm – 3.45pm  Conclusion   

Fremantle Campus Map Fremantle Train Station The Roundhouse Bathers Bay

36

32

37

42

40

43

46

PERTH

19 47

31

33

41

29 28

45

30

23 20 5 1 6

44 2

4

21

3

18

7 38

26

17

24

Fremantle City centre

25 8

22

15

16 11

9

35

39

10

27

34

13

Disabled access Bicycle parking

12

CAT bus stop Public parking

N

14

Please note: Numbers on this map are University building references and are not street numbers.

University Bookshop

Fishing Boat Harbour

ND1 Foley Hall > Vice Chancellery > Fees Office > General Counsel > Office of Communications & Media > Staffing Office > Student Administration > University Relations & Development > University Reception > Bridget Faye Room > Chancellors’ Room > Classrooms > Foley Hall > Helen Lombard Room > Santa Maria Lecture Theatre ND2 Malloy Courtyard ND3 Prindiville Hall > Communications Laboratory > Performing Arts Centre > Student Association Offices > Student Common Room ND4 Tannock Hall of Education Staff Parking ND5 P&O Hotel > Classrooms > Student Residence > Staff Flat ND6 Student Recreation Hall

ND12 Port Lodge > Student Residence > Hesburgh Room > University Bookshop ND13 Craven Law Library ND14 School of Law > Academic Offices > Tutorial Rooms ND15 Bateman Courtyard ND16 School of Medicine > Classrooms ND17 St Teresa’s Library: - Arts & Sciences - Business - Education - Philosophy & Theology - Reference Library ND18 Academic Offices ND19 School of Arts & Sciences > Counselling > Academic Offices ND20 Staff Parking ND21 St John of God Hall > General Classroom Block ND22 Court House > School of Law Courtroom > Drill Hall Courtyard

ND7 St Teresa’s Library > Library Staff > Open Access Computers > Reading Rooms

ND23 Admissions Office Prospective Students Office Finance Office (first floor)

ND8 Holy Spirit Chapel

ND24 Registrar’s Office Academic Services

ND9 Student Life Office > Campus Ministry/Chaplain > Careers & Counselling Office

ND25 The Drill Hall > Ceremonial, Lecture & Conference Hall

ND10 Freehills Law Lecture Hall

ND26 Staff Parking

ND11 School of Law > Academic Offices > Lecture Rooms > Dean’s Office

ND27 Staff Parking ND28 School of Philosophy & Theology > Academic Offices > Dean’s Office ND29 Staff Parking

ND30 Cleopatra Hotel > Student Residence ND31 Physiotherapy Laboratory ND32 School of Arts & Sciences > Science Laboratories > Academic Offices ND33 IT Services ND34 School of Medicine > Reception > Academic Offices > Dean’s Office ND35 School of Medicine > Clinical Training Laboratories > Classrooms & Lecture Theatre > Academic Offices > Michael Quinlan Room > Roy & Amy Galvin Medical Library > Associate Dean’s Office ND36 His Majesty's Hotel School of Education > Religious Education > Computer Laboratories > Academic Offices > Classrooms > Dean’s Office ND37 School of Nursing > Doreen McCarthy Nursing Laboratory > Helen Court Nursing Laboratory > Classrooms > Academic Offices > Dean’s Office ND38 School of Medicine > Resource Room > Anatomy Laboratory ND39 School of Medicine > Academic Offices ND40 School of Health Sciences > Biomedical Science > Exercise Science > Health & Physical Education > Physiotherapy Academic Offices > Dean’s Office

ND41 Staff Parking ND42 Fremantle Hotel School of Arts & Sciences (first floor) > Academic Offices > Dean’s Office School of Business (second floor) > Accounting & Finance > Management & Marketing > Classrooms > Dean’s Office Chancellery > Fairweathers Bar > John Paul II Room > Michael Keating Room > Visiting Staff Flat > Carolyn Tannock Courtyard ND43 School of Nursing > Academic Offices > Classrooms ND44 Academic Enabling and Support Centre ND45 Campus Services Office ND46 Health Sciences Research > Institute for Health & Rehabilitation Research > John Bloomfield Exercise Science Laboratory > Preventive Health Research Clinic > Lecture Theatre > Research Training Lecture Theatre > Seminar Rooms > Academic Offices School of Physiotherapy (second floor) > Physiotherapy Training & Research > Brian Edwards Physiotherapy Sciences Laboratory > Neurosciences laboratory > LifeSpan Sciences Laboratory ND47 Staff Parking

27 OCTOBER 2010

The Esplanade

INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON PRISON POPULATIONS – KEYNOTE SPEAKERS  Professor Anthony Doob Anthony N. Doob is a Professor of Criminology (Emeritus) at the Centre for Criminology and Sociolegal Studies, University of Toronto. He graduated from Harvard in 1964 and received his Ph.D. (in psychology) from Stanford University in 1967. He served as Director of the Centre of Criminology from 1979 to 1989 and was one of the members of the Canadian Sentencing Commission from 1984 until 1987. He has written on a wide range of topics related to the youth and adult justice systems and Canadian imprisonment policies. His current work focuses largely on the development of Canadian criminal justice policy.

Professor David Green David A. Green is an Assistant Professor in the Sociology Department at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York. He received his PhD from the University of Cambridge, Institute of Criminology in 2006. Afterwards he was a postdoctoral Junior Research Fellow at the college of Christ Church, University of Oxford. He won the 2007 Young Criminologist Award from the European Society of Criminology, and his book, When Children Kill Children: Penal Populism and Political Culture, received the 2009 British Society of Criminology Book Prize. He was selected as a Straus Fellow at New York University’s Straus Institute for the Advanced Study of Law and Justice for 2010-11. Dr. Green's main research interests involve the interrelationship between crime, media, public opinion, and politics in a comparative perspective.

Professor Susanne Karstedt Susanne Karstedt is a Professor of Criminology at the University of Leeds, UK. She graduated from the University of Hamburg (MA Sociology), and received her doctorate from the Faculty of Sociology of Bielefeld, Germany. She received the Christa-Hoffmann-Riehm Award for SocioLegal Studies in 2005, the Award of Recognition for Outstanding Services to the International Society of Criminology, Stockholm, 2006, and the Sellin-Glueck-Award of the American Society of Criminology in 2007. She has been a visiting fellow/ professor at the Australian National University, the American Bar Foundation and the Catholic University of Leuven. Since 2012 she is Adjunct Professor at the School of Justice, Queensland University of Technology, Australia. Her international and comparative research focuses on the role of democratic values, institutions and culture for patterns and levels of crime and criminal justice. Other research areas include transitional justice and collective memories, mass atrocity crimes, and state crime.

Professor John Pratt John Pratt is Professor of Criminology at the Institute of Criminology, Victoria University of Wellington and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand. From 2009 to 2012 he was also a Royal Society James Cook Fellow in Social Science and (during 2010-2011) a Fellow at the Straus Institute for Advanced Studies of Law and Justice at New York University. He has published extensively on the history and sociology of punishment and on comparative penology. His two part British Journal of Criminology article on ‘Scandinavian Exceptionalism’ in 2008 won the Radzinowicz award in 2009 for ’the article that best advanced the discipline of criminology.’ His latest book (with Anna Eriksson) is 'Contrasts in Punishment: An explanation of Anglophone excess and Nordic exceptionalism', is to be published by Routledge in January 2013.

Professor Sonja Snacken Sonja Snacken is Professor of Criminology, Penology and Sociology of Law at the Free University of Brussels, where she now holds a ‘Research Fellowship’ (2006-2016). She was a Research Fellow at the Straus Institute for the Advanced Study of Law and Justice at the New York University School of Law (2010-11). She participates in several international scientific networks, the Council of Europe and the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. In 2010 she received the ‘Ernest John Solvay Prize’ from the Fund for Scientific Research. These ‘Flemish Nobel Prizes’ are given once every five years and award five Flemish scientists for their international top careers. Her research focuses on sentencing and the implementation of custodial and non-custodial sentences in Belgium and Europe.

Dr Hilde Tubex Dr Tubex has been working at the Department of Criminology of the Free University of Brussels (1991-2007). Her fields of expertise are mainly in penological research, especially in international comparative studies. In a series of research projects she worked on such topics as long-term imprisonment, parole, violence in prisons and sex offenders. She combined her work at the university with other, external expert assignments, such as an expert to the Council of Europe (CoE), substitute assessor on the parole board, member of the Central Inspectorate of Prisons and as an advisor on penal policy to the Belgian minister of Justice. In 2007 she migrated to Western Australia. In Australia she has worked for four years at the Department of Corrective Services as Team Leader Research and Evaluation. In August 2010, Dr Hilde Tubex was awarded a future fellowship from the Australian Research Council for the project “Reducing imprisonment rates in Australia: International experiences, marginal populations and a focus on the over-representation of Indigenous people.” She now works at the Crime Research Centre, in the Faculty of Law at the University of Western Australia.  

 

Thursday January 10th, 2013  8.30am – 4pm  Tannock Hall  Notre Dame University  Croke Street, Fremantle 

INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON PRISON POPULATIONS Crime Research Centre Faculty of Law University of Western Australia ABN: 37 882 817 280 

    REGISTRATION FORM

REGISTRATION CLOSES TUESDAY DECEMBER 18th 2012 Please complete one form for each registrant AND fax to Crime Research Centre (6488 7918). Please use block letters.

Section 1 – PERSONAL DETAILS Title: (Ms/Mr/Dr/Prof)________ First Name ______________________Surname _____________________________ Organisation __________________________________________________________________________________ Mailing address (number/street) ___________________________________________________________________ Suburb _____________________________State_______Postcode _______Telephone (_____)________________ Email ________________________________________________________________________________________ Special requirements ___________________________________________________________________________ Name as you wish it to appear on name badge First name __________________Surname ___________________ A Tax Invoice/Receipt will be mailed when payment has been received

Section 2 – REGISTRATION FEES – including GST Delegate University student (student ID required at conference)

 $145  $90

Please complete a separate registration form for each delegate from your organisation.

Section 3 – PAYMENT DETAILS Credit Card – Please complete the following:

 Visa

Mastercard

Credit Card number __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ Cardholder’s name _______________________________

Expiry date:___/___ Amount: $ _______

Signature ___________________________________

Address for posting Tax Invoice/Receipt: ____________________________________________________________ _____________________Postcode:__

Contact number for Cardholder: ____________________

Cheque – Please make cheque out to “University of Western Australia” and mail direct to Ms Jude Rowohlt, Crime Research Centre M407, University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, WA 6009. FAX COMPLETED REGISTRATION FORMS TO: (08) 6488 7918 REGISTRATION FORMS CAN ALSO BE SCANNED AND EMAILED TO: [email protected] TELEPHONE ENQUIRIES: (08) 6488 2830 

REGISTRATION CLOSES TUESDAY DECEMBER 18th 2012 .

Suggest Documents