Produced by: Natalie Kestecher of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Built on the site of a colonial era estate, the John Morony Correctional Complex in Sydney's outer suburban fringe covers 300 acres and all the bases. There are minimum and maximum-security prisons for men, and a women's prison. There is also accommodation for a seized crocodile, smuggled parrots, endangered snakes, crippled kangaroos and wounded wombats.
In the middle of an Australian summer the sprawling prison grounds are dry, bare and flat, and the whole complex is surrounded by high chain link fences topped with razor wire. Within this forbidding environment there lies an unlikely refuge, a literal sanctuary of green, with a lush garden, shady trees and plenty of water. The wildlife center is part animal hospital, part educational facility -- and a congenial workplace for three correctional officers and ten minimum security male inmates.
Producer Natalie Kestecher takes listeners inside a jail to meet up with a group of men for whom working in a cage might even be fun. Photos:
Links:
The System and Its Officers
Community service addresses the traditional sentencing goals of punishment, reparation, restitution, and rehabilitation.
CRB-Community Correction Punishments
Community Correction Punishments: An Alternative To Incarceration for Nonviolent Offenders
SOUNDPRINT's Global Perspectives Series
Listen to the entire Global Perspectives series.
Books:
Capital Punishment in America: A Balanced Examination by: Evan J. Mandery 2004 This textbook considers the morality of the death penalty, the constitutional issues of its implementation in the United States, and some of the hard questions concerning its application.
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