Criminal Justice and Crime Control
Three Volume Set
Edited by:
- John Muncie - The Open University, UK
Series:
SAGE Library of Criminology
SAGE Library of Criminology
October 2007 | 1 176 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
This three-volume set of original (classic and contemporary) readings is designed to reveal the broad range of crime control strategies typically encountered in criminal justice systems worldwide. Such a collection is particularly timely not only because of growing concerns over the development of `new punitive' responses to offenders (mass incarceration; new cultures of control, surveillance and security; naming and shaming) but also because of the imperative to unravel the impact that the emergence of supranational legal orders and international standards is likely to have on questions of national sovereignty and the democratic accountability of the nation state.
Volume One - outlines the many and varied competing conceptions of justice in national and international settings.
Volume Two - explores the varied means of punishment and correction that currently make up the penal landscape.
Volume Three - examines how crime prevention, risk assessment and crime science strategies are significantly extending the reach of criminal justice into everyday lives.
Volume One
PART ONE: CRIMINAL LAW AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE
P Spierenberg
The Emergence of Criminal Justice
H L Packer
Two Models of the Criminal Process
A J Ashworth
Concepts of Criminal Justice
J Griffiths
Ideology in Criminal Procedure or a Third 'Model' of the Criminal Process
M King
Theoretical Approches to Criminal Justice
PART TWO: CRIMINAL JUSTICE
R Quinney
Criminal Justice in Capitalist Society
J Reiman
Criminal Justice through the Looking Glass, or Winning by Losing
F Heidensohn
Models of Justice
B Hudson
Beyond White Man's Justice
PART THREE: CONFLICT RESOLUTION
N Christie
Conflicts as Property
S E Merry
Sorting out Popular Justice
R L Abel
The Contradictions of Informal Justice
H Zehr and H Mika
Fundamental Concepts of Restorative Justice
H Pepinsky
Peacemaking Primer
PART FOUR: TRANSNATIONAL AND GLOBAL JUSTICE
J W E Sheptycki
Transnational Policing and the Makings of a Postmodern State
D Nelken
The Globalization of Crime and Criminal Justice
L Wacquant
How Penal Common Sense Comes to Europeans
W Morrison
Globalization, Human Rights and International Criminal Courts
Volume Two
PART FIVE: RETRIBUTION AND DETERRENCE
J Feinberg
The Expressive Function of Punishment
A von Hirsch
The Principle of Commensurate Deserts
J Q Wilson
Thinking about Crime
F E Zimring and G Hawkins
Incapacitation and Imprisonment Policy
C Murray
The American Experiment in Imprisonment
PART SIX: CORRECTIONS
D Garland
Penal Strategies in a Welfare State
American Friends Services Committee
Crime and Punishment
A Scull
Community Corrections
R Martinson
What Works? Questions and Answers about Prison Reform
F T Cullen and K E Gilbert
Reaffirming Rehabilitation
R Ross, E Fabiano and C Ewles
Reasoning and Rehabilitation
J McGuire and P Priestley
Reviewing What Works? Past, Present and Future
PART SEVEN: THE NEW PUNITIVENESS
F E Zimring and D T Johnson
Public Opinion and the Governance of Punishment in Democratic Political Systems
J Whitman
Contemporary American Harshness
J Pratt
Emotive and Ostentatious Punishment
P O'Malley
Volatile and Contradictory Punishment
D Garland
Crime Control and Social Order
Volume Thre
PART EIGHT: ACTUARIAL JUSTICE
J Simon
The Ideological Effects of Actuarial Practices
M Feeley and J Simon
Actuarial Justice
P O'Malley
Risk, Power and Crime Prevention
PART NINE: SURVEILLANCE
M Foucault
Panopticism
S Graham
Spaces of Surveillant Simulation
D Lyon
Globalizing Surveillance
T Caldeira
Fortified Enclaves
PART TEN: CRIME PREVENTION
R V Clarke
Introduction
J Q Wilson and G Kelling
Broken Windows
L W Sherman et al
Preventing Crime
G Laycock
Defining Crime Science
G Hughes, E McLaughlin and J Muncie
Teetering on the Edge
PART ELEVEN: GOVERNANCE, SECURITY AND SOCIAL CONTROL
S Cohen
The Punitive City
C Shearing and P Stenning
Private Security
J Simon
Governing through Crime
N Rose
Government and Control
A Edwards and G Hughes
Comparing the Governance of Safety in Europe