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<head>III. Prospect of <sic>Encrease</sic>. <lb/> 15</head> | <head>III. Prospect of <sic>Encrease</sic>. <lb/> 15</head> | ||
<p>Per <gap/> chance <lb/>of increase on the <lb/>Military and <lb/> Naval establishments. p. 11. | <p>Per <gap/> chance <lb/>of increase on the <lb/>Military and <lb/> Naval establishments. p. 11.</p> | ||
<head>16</head> | <head>16</head> | ||
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<p>Items not belonging <lb/>to the account <lb/>of profit to the <lb/>Mother Country. <lb/> p. 16. <pb/> | <p>Items not belonging <lb/>to the account <lb/>of profit to the <lb/>Mother Country. <lb/> p. 16. <pb/> | ||
<head>V Economy <lb/> 25.</head> | |||
<p>2. Colony produce <lb/>employed in the <lb/>purchase of goods <lb/>consumed or used <lb/> in the Colony. p. 16 </p> | |||
<head>26.</head> | |||
<p>— any more than<lb/> it received <del>for</del> on<lb/> these same terms <lb/> from a foreign <lb/>Country. p.16</p> | |||
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Compensation}
V Economy}
IV4 Compensation
1
4. Fourths object, compensation
or satisfaction: viz: for the damage
by the offence, for which the punishment
of the transportation
was inflicted.
This, though it ought
to be among the ends of penal justice, is
not under the English
law in the case of
transportable offences. p.1
2
Cause of this omission.
The profit to the King
by forfeiture was the
only direct object of
penal justice under
the feudal barbarism.
3
Felling's opinions and
labours of the Author
on this subject.—
4
His plan for introducing
the principle
into penal legislation
at his own expence.
His struggle with the
Treasury to keep in
the the article
for that purpose in
the Contract. p.
5
In N. S. Wales compensation
out of that fund is altogether
impossible; the value
of a man's labour
then being £46 a
year less than nothing.
6
But the object will
hardly be denied to
be a desirable one.
7
— if so, in so far as
the Panopticon system
contributes to it it
has the advantage of
the N. S. Wales registers.
p.5.
8.
The compensation
with which the
auther was amused
for his injuries,
belongs to another
head & will be
spoken of in another
place. — p. 5
---page break---
Marg Contents
V5 Economy </lb> Past comparative Expence —
1
Convict expence —
reference for grounds
and calculations to
the 28th Finance Rep.
1. Past actual expence
p.1.
2
In New South Wales
annual expence per
Convict, as per D__
£33..s 9 d 5 p
Maximum
(The most
probable) }£46..7.0 1/4
p.1.
3
D of Panopticon —
system — if established
when promised £13..10..0
p. 1.
4
Ratio, from more
than 1/2 to less than
1/4 of N. S. Wales p. 2.
5
2 Latterly the £13..10s was raised to £10.10
but the lapse of time
the work of Mr Pitt
for the accommodation
originally of Dr Spencer.
p.2. +1 +1 which lapse of time, stands first among the four grounds of relinquishment. Treasury Proceedings 11th June N S
4 Prospect of Decrease
In New South Wales
decrease of the expence
now far probable
p. 3.
7
1. But there is no
of its ever
being reduced so
low as the above
— £13..10
nor even as the £18..10
p. 3.
8
Long before it was were
reduced below the
Panopticon expence,
the Panopticon expence
would be
reduced to 0— p.4
9
1. Probable decrease —
amount if is according
to the supporters
of New South Wales —
viz: not so much
as a 1/5 reducing it
from £46..5 a year
per Convict say
to £37 — p.5.
---page break---
V5
Economy
II. Prospect of Decrease.
10
— which is the exact
double of Panopticon
expence as enhanced
by Pitt & perfidy
& nearly treble, if
unenhanced. — p. 7.
11
Combined view of
the economy, morality,
& logic displayed
in the conduct of
the Treasury in
the relinquishment
of Panopticon, compared
with the support given to
N. S. Wales. — p.8.
12
Economy was the
stronghold — and was
to make up for
all deficiencies in
respect of the four direct
ends of punishment.
p. 9. p
13
Mr Rose's sentiments
appealed to, on the
regard due to
"arithmetic and its
"calculations." p. 10.
Pamphlet on the Civic List 1802.
14 Panopticon expence —
16
Certain cessation of
the Panopticon expence
certain the duration
of it reduced already reduced
by the manufactured
lapse of time; i.e.
by waste of J. & S. B's
own time. p. 10.
III. Prospect of Encrease.
15
Per chance
of increase on the
Military and
Naval establishments. p. 11.
16
1. Demand for fresh
force as stated in
Mrs Paterson's the Ladys letter.
p. 12.
17
2. in two paragraphs.
p. 13
17(a)
Bell's Paper 3rd Jany
1800. p. 13.
---page break---
V.5. Economy
18
This expence will
not be capable of
being concealed by
any such contrivance
as that of throwing
it upon a wrong
fund; as in the
case of prisons. +
+ This was the contrivance of the D of Portland as noted in his letter to the Treasury 14 Octr 1799 throwing it upon the Poor Rates by his own authority instead of the General Fund assigned by Parliament — p.14
19
If not as a prison
may it not be
beneficial as a
colony? p. 15
20
Answer
1. If in point of
wealth it must
afford a clear surplus
of wealth by
capital not drawn
from the Mother
Country. p. 15.
21
Whatever capital
is employed in
the Colony instead
of the Mother Country
is so much
loss to the Mother
Country — p. 16.
22
But so long as
the tax paid out
of the produce of
the exported mass
of capital is as
great as if not
exported the loss
will not be felt.
p.16.
23
Any deficiency in
such payment as
also any expence
to government is
so much loss. p. 16.
24
Items not belonging
to the account
of profit to the
Mother Country.
p. 16.
---page break---
V Economy
25.
2. Colony produce
employed in the
purchase of goods
consumed or used
in the Colony. p. 16
26.
— any more than
it received for on
these same terms
from a foreign
Country. p.16
Identifier: | JB/116/273/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 116. |
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1802-08-07 |
1-8, 1-17, 17a, 18-40 |
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116 |
panopticon versus new south wales |
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273 |
iv compensation v economy marg. contents |
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001 |
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marginal summary sheet |
2 |
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recto |
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john herbert koe |
cw 1799 |
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c. abbit lees |
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1799 |
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37806 |
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