Fraser Crichton - Featured Portfolio
The Moral Drift
Fraser Crichton
Featured Portfolio
Essay by Elizabeth Stanley for PhotoForum, 21 January 2021
Content warning: includes reference to child abuse and sexual assault.
Photographer Fraser Crichton lives in Te Whanganui-a-Tara / Wellington. He graduated with a Masters in Photojournalism and Documentary Photography at University of Arts London in 2019.
His work takes on the power of the state. Exposing the inter-generational impacts of social welfare and criminal justice practices, he draws our attention to how violence and abuse are structured in laws, policies and everyday institutional and cultural practices. His investigations – bringing together videos, archival documents and still images – demonstrate the ability of state officials to silence trauma and maintain impunity for past and ongoing harms. Importantly, his contributions always illustrate the tenacity, courage, resilience and challenge of victims-survivors. He has a keen eye for hope.
In the years following World War Two, New Zealand authorities obsessed with declining moralities. According to prominent actors like Oswald Mazengarb, the country was drifting into deviancy. His ‘Special Committee on Moral Delinquency in Children and Adolescents’ (whose report was posted to nearly 300,000 homes in 1954) targeted the development of comic books, cinema, indecent literature, advertising and all manner of suspected parental frivolities as explanations for the perceived waywardness of New Zealand’s young people.
Authorities reiterated the panic. By 1957, the police had created the Juvenile Crime Prevention Branch and Child Welfare staff had given over 500 presentations to community groups, encouraging audiences to report those ‘out of parental control’. This latter concept provided a narrative net for the trawling of hundreds and thousands of children and their families for official examination, reporting, sorting and removals. At a time of Māori migration into towns and cities, the widespread racism and economic marginalisation ensured that Māori children were quickly funnelled into the care system.
In the second half of the 20th Century, tens of thousands of children were placed into ‘care’. They were met by foster carers, social workers, residential housemasters, priests, nuns, among others. Many youngsters ricocheted around the country. Some, moving between islands, thought they were being sent to a different country. Some had dozens of placements in a few years. This constant moving – an administrative-led approach that is still so common for children in care today –caused great anxiety. Children, always unsettled and on edge, felt unloved. They lost their lives with friends, siblings, parents, aunties, cousins, whānau. Submerged in a Pākehā world, Māori children also lost te reo, marae and cultural identity.
Aroha was rare. In social welfare institutions, for example, children had to harden up, and quickly. We are still learning about the levels and nature of physical, sexual and psychological violence directed by official ‘carers’ to their charges. Many survivors recount horrific terrors from individual predators but also from institutional control practices. Children could be given electro-convulsive ‘treatment’ for being ‘cheeky’, or held in silent secure cells for not doing homework. Some were told that they would never be released, or that their parents were dead.
On leaving care, many children had few supports. Juggling traumas, they often spiralled into early adulthood with mental health problems, raging drug dependencies, deep anxieties. Of the 105 residential care-leavers featured in The Road to Hell, 96 ended up in custody by the age of 21, and over a third had joined a gang.
New Zealanders are not always keen to acknowledge how many of the country’s ongoing crime problems have emerged from the crimes of state officials or their ‘contractors’. While most people who have care histories do not go on to offend, the connection between care and custody is staggering. The majority of NZ prisoners have a care history. Yet, commentators still persist in falsely separating the identities of ‘victims’ and ‘offenders’ as if they are different populations.
And, in turn, we have sought refuge in increased criminalisation, more policing, surveillant community punishments, as well as the continual building of prisons. The Office of the Ombudsman now publish regular reports to chart the deleterious conditions in which people are incarcerated, as well as the damaging treatments those held in prisons endure. Tie down beds. Excessive restraints. Long lockdowns. In 2020, women at Auckland prison (of whom over two-thirds are Māori) were held down in their small cells for up to 29 hours at a time. They complained of abusive and neglectful treatments from officers. We will no doubt expect them to be confident, caring and ‘together’ when they are released.
Over recent years, we have also remained vigilant in separating (again, mostly Māori) tamariki from their families, under the guise of ‘well-being’ for ‘vulnerable’ children. Oranga Tamariki have even recently engaged armed police to ‘uplift’ children. Can you imagine the terror? Despite such scenes and long histories of violence, state officials still sometimes wonder why parents and whānau care-givers do not trust them. Mothers report that they do not come forward to seek help for drug use or family violence or for struggling to get by, as they fear the consequences. For decades, those who look for help have been regarded as risks, as wanting, irresponsible or incapable.
And for all the state violence, abuse, and inter-generational harms, there has not yet been a real reckoning. Impunity has reigned. Survivors still wait for a formal, collective apology. Compensation may be given – but survivors have to apply to the Ministry of Social Development (an offending agency!) to put themselves forward for a non-transparent process. They receive negligible sums for lost lives. Meanwhile, at the 2020 hearings of the Royal Commission of Inquiry into Abuse in Care, state agency protectionism is on regular display.
Who is morally adrift?
Elizabeth Stanley is a Professor and Director of the Institute of Criminology at Te Herenga Waka/Victoria University of Wellington. She has written widely on state crimes, human rights and incarceration. In 2016, she published ‘The Road to Hell: State Violence against Children in Postwar New Zealand’ (Auckland University Press) that contributed to the establishment of the Royal Commission into Abuse in Care.
Content created with the support of Creative New Zealand.