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Reform in politics, criminal justice and the police in post-Fitzgerald Queensland: An assessment
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Reform in politics, criminal justice and the police in post-Fitzgerald Queensland: An assessment

Timothy Prenzler
Griffith Law Review, Vol.18(3), pp.576-595
2009
url
https://doi.org/10.1080/10854656.2009.10854656View
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Abstract

criminal justice reform Fitzgerald Inquiry Queensland Police Service
This article reviews the main recommendations and reforms emanating from the 1989 Fitzgerald Inquiry in Queensland. The ups and downs of the reform process are chronicled under the three headings of 'politics', 'criminal justice' and 'police'. In politics, there has been a retreat from Fitzgerald"s vision for integrity in government, evidenced by bias in the electoral system, the failure to establish transparency in government decision-making, violations of appointment by merit, and the politicisation of policing. In criminal justice, major hypocrisies and inefficiencies remain in the operation of the law, with a regressive approach to crime reduction through over-reliance on imprisonment. In policing, the Fitzgerald vision for community policing was never implemented at the local level, and the pre-Fitzgerald model of police investigating police remains dominant. The article is focused on describing the nature and extent of the subversion of reform, with some reference to two contributing factors. The first is the gap between the general principles articulated in the Fitzgerald Report and the specific wording of its recommendations. The second concerns the power culture of the Australian Labor Party, whose winner-takes-all philosophy has triumphed over participatory democracy. © 2009, Routledge. All rights reserved.

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