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studies and landmarks
This page considers studies regarding offender registers,
including print and online 'community notification' schemes,
and landmarks in their development.
It covers -
- studies
- government and academic research
-
landmarks - key legislation
and other developments
studies
For Australia see in particular 'The War on Sex Offenders:
Community Notification in Perspective' (RTF)
by Lyn Hinds & Kathleen Daly and 'Deborah's Law: The
Effects of Naming and Shaming on Sex Offenders in Australia'
by C Ronken & R Lincoln in The Australian &
New Zealand Journal of Criminology (2001).
They are supplemented by the 2004 AIC report
Attitudes of employers, corrective services workers,
employment support workers, and prisoners and offenders
towards employing ex-prisoners and ex-offenders and
the 2005 federal Human Rights & Equal Opportunity
Commission On the Record: Guidelines for the prevention
of discrimination in employment on the basis of criminal
record document,
which followed the 2004 discussion paper on criminal convictions
records.
A UK perspective is offered in Keeping Track?: Observations
on Sex Offender Registers in the U.S. (London: Home
Office 1997) by Bill Hebenton & Terry Thomas, the
2001 NSPCC study
Megan's law: does it protect children? A review of
evidence on the impact of community notification as legislated
for through Megan's Law in the United States - Recommendations
for policy makers in the United Kingdom by Elizabeth
Lovell and Innocence Betrayed: Paedophilia, the Media
& Society (London: Polity 2002) by Jon Silverman
& David Wilson.
For the US see proceedings of the 1998 National Conference
on Sex Offender Registries held in Washington under federal
Department of Justice auspices. A description of US state
regimes as of 1996 is provided in Scott Matson & Roxanne
Lieb's Sex Offender Community Notification: A Review
of Laws in 32 States (PDF).
For anxiety and reassurance see in particular Corey Robin's
Fear: The History of a Political Idea (New York:
Oxford Uni Press 2004), Mary Douglas's Risk &
Blame (London: Routledge 1992) and Hazel Kemshall's
Understanding risk in criminal justice (Buckingham:
Open Uni Press 2003).
Predators: Pedophiles, Rapists, and Other Sex Offenders:
Who They Are, How They Operate, and How We Can Protect
Ourselves and Our Children (New York: Basic 2003)
by Anna Salter offers a point of reference in considering
anxieties. For us it understates the extent to which crimes
aren't committed by strangers and is reminiscent of 1950s
primers about how to spot a commie. Ideally it would be
read in conjunction with Silverman & Wilson's discussion
of media opportunism and moral panics.
landmarks
1986 Qld Criminal Law (Rehabilitation of Offenders)
Act 1986
1991 NSW Criminal Records Act 1991
1992 WA Spent Convictions Act 1992
1994 US federal Jacob Wetterling Act: requires
US states to have a sex offender register
1996 US Megan's Law: amends Jacob Wetterling
Act, requires all states to allow public access to or
dissemination of registered information in sex offender
registers
1996 US Pam Lychner Sexual Offender Tracking &
Identification Act: increases registration requirements
for repeat and aggravated offenders
1997 UK Sex Offenders Act 1997: establishes non-public
register
1997 Deborah Coddington's private register in Australia
1998 NSW Child Protection (Prohibited Employment)
Act 1998
1998 UK Crime & Disorder Act 1998
2000 'Sarah's Law' campaign in UK
2000 NSW Child Protection (Offenders Registration)
Act 2000
2001 UK Sex Offenders (Notice Requirement) (Foreign
Travel) Regulations 2001
2001 Eire Sex Offenders Act 2001: certain offenders
required to register personal details within seven days
at a Garda station
2002 NSW Child
Protection Legislation Amendment Act 2002
2002 NT Criminal Records (Spent Convictions) Act 2002
2003 Qld Sexual Offences (Protection of Children)
Amendment Act 2003
2004 launch of Australian National Child Offender Register
(ANCOR)
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