Island Lecture Series – December 2019: “‘Don’t Discard the Utilitarian Aims’: Revisiting the UK Prison Offer” with Dr. Dacia Leslie
“Don’t Discard the Utilitarian Aims”: Revisiting the UK Prison Offer
with Dr. Dacia Leslie
Tuesday, December 10, 2019 | 7 p.m. | Main Building Faculty Lounge, UPEI Campus
The Island Lecture Series December lecture featured a visiting scholar from Jamaica, Dr. Dacia Leslie, speaking about Jamaica’s prison system: “Don’t Discard the Utilitarian Aims”: Revisiting the UK Prison Offer.
One of the extended controversies surrounding the J$5.5 billion ($51.8 million CAD) offer of the United Kingdom in 2016 to help build a modern prison in Jamaica concerns the extent to which the offer was a form of “penal humanitarianism.” If prison transfer agreements to which penal humanitarianism has been intrinsically linked are a means of extending historical geopolitical power, then the Government of Jamaica’s rejection of the offer might be considered good governance. After carrying out research into Jamaica’s correctional reforms, Dr. Leslie argues that the process by which government decisions are implemented should produce tangible results that meet the needs of citizens, while making the best use of resources. As such, the utilitarian aims of the UK Prison Offer should not be ignored. Dr. Leslie’s talk offers a pragmatic lens through which we might gain deeper insight into the justifications for Jamaica’s rejection of the offer.
Dr. Dacia Leslie is a Research Fellow at the Sir Arthur Lewis Institute of Social & Economic Studies (SALISES), The University of the West Indies, Mona Campus, Jamaica. She is also a 2019 recipient of the Canada-CARICOM Faculty Leadership Scholarship that is being hosted by the Institute of Island Studies, and an IIS Research Associate.
Prior to joining SALISES in 2016, she completed a PhD in Criminology at Cardiff University as a Commonwealth Scholar and served as Regional Coordinator of the Wales and Northern Ireland Commonwealth Scholars’ Regional Network. She is also a member of the British Society of Criminology and Director of the Mayeltha & Gwendolyn Foundation, a non-governmental organization recently established to improve the life chances of invisible children throughout the Caribbean Region.
Her research focuses on the facilitators of effective reintegration and the lived experiences of offenders, ex-inmates, involuntary removed migrants and their child dependents. Recidivism in the Caribbean, a book published by Palgrave Macmillan, is a recent output of this ongoing work.