‘Looking back at the conference I am quite impressed by the work of the CEP. The organisation, the agenda, the technical aspects were very well organised. But maybe even more important, the topics were well-deepend.’
Anne Kruusement is project leader Electronic Monitoring at the Ministry of Justice in Estonia. Estonia is the first Eastern European country which has integrated electronic monitoring in its probation service. ‘In Estonia there was an urge to introduce it, as my country has the highest number of prisoners per capita in the whole of Europe: some 5,000 prisoners on a population of only 1.4 million people’, she explains. ‘Our Minister of Justice needed to do something and electronic monitoring was one way to deal with it. We have introduced electronic monitoring in about one year, so that is rather quick. The thing is that Estonian law doesn’t leave room for small pilots, so we had to implement the system all over the country at once. In order to win public support for our plans we gave the public very thorough information. We explained what we are doing, and why. We made clear that serious offenders will remain behind bars, and won’t be in the electronic monitoring programme. Of course there were some people and newspapers objecting the programme. But politicians were in favour of our plans and we haven’t had much problems with the community.’
‘I think the conference was very interesting. It is a good place to learn about the technological aspects, other systems etc. I also was surprised by the interest in the Estonian system. I could give other participants some good advice. Now that I have this experience of my first CEP conference on electronic monitoring, I in fact regret that I was not present during the previous conference 2 years ago.’
Presentations
- Offender tracking in England 2004 – 2006 (by Steve Birkett)
- Electronic monitoring in Swedish prisons (by Kjell Carlsson)
- Developments on Electronic Monitoring in the USA (by Peggy Conway)
- Electronic monitoring in Denmark (by Lisbet Heine)
- Privatisation in Electronic Monitoring (by Bob Lilly)
- Portugal Bail Curfew – House Arrest (by Susana Pinto and Nuno Caiado)
- Strategies for evaluation of impact of GPS on high risk offenders in the USA (by Marc Renzema)
- Two tracking & tracing experiments within prison facilities (by Frank Schulpen)
- Dangerous Offenders (by John Scott)
- On the way to electronic monitoring of offenders in Poland (by Dariusz Sielicki)
- Integration of electronics within probation supervision in the Netherlands (by Jan Verhoeff)
- Ethics, Politics and Practise (by Dick Whitfield)
Presentations of sponsors of the conference: