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The Elephant's Tooth
Crime in Alice Springs

I know Alice Springs and other areas are going through incredibly difficult times but this book is full of relevant questions it invites us to answer. Not for the now, but for the where we want to be. Law and order now is important for the safety and security of everyone. But we certainly need a next step.

Craig Blanch - reader.

 

Between August 2020 and January 2023, independent research into the root causes of crime in rural Australia was undertaken by Sustainable Justice Australia. Hundreds of people from all walks of life were consulted informally through conversation and story. From these conversations, a way forward emerged. An open model, the lychee model, is presented as one way toward sustainable justice.

Alice Springs was taken as an example of a rural town.

The study examines how we think about crime, problems within the law, and trauma in the community and lists the hurdles we have to overcome to solve this highly complex problem.

The reader is invited to participate in several thought experiments that use stories about animals, trees and inanimate things in nature.

Animals and lifeless things were brought before courts of law on criminal charges in the distant and not-too-distant past. In ancient Greece, waves of the sea were punished with whip lashings after a storm had sunk a ship. Rocks and trees that had killed people appeared before a court of law and were trialled, convicted and stricken with hammers or axes as punishments. As recently as 1916, circus elephant Mary was publicly hanged from a railroad crane in Tennessee as a punishment for murder. She had killed her handler after he had prodded her on the left cheek. The coroner who examined Mary after her death found that she had a severely infected tooth in the spot where her minder had prodded her. We no longer put waves, rocks, trees, or animals on trial for reasons that are clear to all of us. We have come a long way. We have become so much more enlightened, but have we, really?

This is the questions this book tries to answer. A just justice system should be crystal clear about the origins of human behaviour. Punishing people, especially young people, because they deserve it makes as little sense as punishing a wave, a rock, a tree, or an elephant.

The Elephant's Tooth, Crime in Rural Australia contains an extra chapter about crime in rural Australia, otherwise it is identical to The Elephant's Tooth, Crime in Alice Springs.

The Elephant's Tooth, Crime in Rural Australia, by Suzanne Visser eBOOK

$16.00Price
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