
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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The rise of ‘New World’ The rise of ‘New World’
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The fall of ‘New World’ The fall of ‘New World’
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EM outside the MoJ EM outside the MoJ
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After ‘New World’ After ‘New World’
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Returning to ‘New World’? Returning to ‘New World’?
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Conclusion Conclusion
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References References
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18 Making local regulation better? Marketisation, privatisation and the erosion of social protection
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15 Neo-liberal imaginaries and GPS tracking in England and Wales
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Published:July 2020
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Abstract
In 2012, alongside its part-privatisation of the Probation Service, the Ministry of Justice secretly conceived a strategy, hubristically named ‘New World’, to upgrade ‘obsolete’ Radio Frequency (RF) electronic monitoring technology with Global Positioning System (GPS) tracking, and subject unprecedented numbers of offenders to it by 2020. Replacing the existing private sector delivery infrastructure with a hitherto untried model was pursued more openly, but obscured larger ambitions. Over five years ‘New World’ failed spectacularly, and expensively. Subsequent official audits indicted its implementation and actually questioned its conception, but neglected the ideological context and the disruptive political strategy which underpinned it. ‘New World’ was a calculated exercise in ‘disruptive’ neo-liberal statecraft, and the failure of its first iteration does not mean the end of it.
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