Abstract
The Probation Service in England and Wales has been caught up in the New Labour government’s broader programme of “modernization”. In a document more radical than anything produced under the previous Conservative government, New Labour has proposed that the Service be brought under centralized control, that its name be changed to reflect its new primary purpose of public protection, and that it be brought into closer structural alignment with the Prison Service. This paper discerns in the case made for centralization and the need for closer ties with prisons an authoritarian impulse which is deeply at odds with the Service’s own local traditions, and questions whether the undoubtedly necessary process of modernization must take the form being proposed by the government.

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