Humane initiatives in privately-run British prisons such as allowing inmates to spend entire days with their children have caught the eye of Corrections Minister Anne Tolley.
Mrs Tolley visited the Serco-managed Doncaster Prison in England last week to investigate programmes that could be implemented in New Zealand prisons.
British-based company Serco will manage nearly a quarter of New Zealand's prison population by 2015 when it takes over a new 960-bed facility in Wiri. It began a six-year contract at Mt Eden Correctional Facility last year.
Mrs Tolley was most interested in the Doncaster facility's "Families First" scheme, which encouraged ongoing relationships between prisoners and their children.
"While we were there, there was a father who was bathing his 18-month-old daughter. She comes in once a week, and the two of them go through a normal parenting day. He has a day with his little one and he has done since she was born," Mrs Tolley said.