Values in Criminology and Community Justice
Editat de Malcolm Cowburn, Paul Senior, Anne Robinson, Marian Dugganen Limba Engleză Paperback – 17 mar 2015
The stated values of criminologists, policy makers, and researchers don’t always correspond with their responses to crime. This collection parses the many different “sides” these professionals take on issues relating to victims and offenders, punishment and protection, and rights and responsibilities. Drawing on empirical research, crime theory, and criminal justice practice, the contributors explore such topics as the dynamics of race, gender, and age; the workings of the criminal justice system; the ethics of research; and current debates about new criminological issues such as the green movement and Islamophobia.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781447300366
ISBN-10: 144730036X
Pagini: 384
Dimensiuni: 171 x 241 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Bristol University Press
Colecția Policy Press
ISBN-10: 144730036X
Pagini: 384
Dimensiuni: 171 x 241 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Bristol University Press
Colecția Policy Press
Notă biografică
Malcolm Cowburn is professor emeritus of applied social science, Marian Duggan is a senior lecturer in criminology, Anne Robinson is a senior lecturer in criminology and leader for the Certificate in Offender Management Programme, and Paul Senior is professor of probation studies and director of the Hallam Centre for Community Justice, all at Sheffield Hallam University, UK.
Cuprins
A brief introduction
Notes on contributors
Section One: Values of criminological theories
1 Judging offenders: the moral implications of criminological theories
Simon Cottee
2 Postmodernism and criminological thought: ‘Whose science? Whose knowledge?’
Liz Austen with Malcolm Cowburn
3 Marxist criminology: whose side, which values?
David Moxon
4 A contemporary reflection on feminist criminology: whose side are we on?
Victoria Lavis and Tammi Walker
5 Bringing the boys back home: re-engendering criminology
Anthony Ellis and Maggie Wykes
6 New ‘racisms’ and prejudices? The criminalisation of ‘Asians’
Sunita Toor
7 The value(s) of cultural criminology
James Banks and David Moxon
8 Justifying ‘green’ criminology: values and ‘taking sides’ in an ecologically informed social science
Gary R. Potter
Section 2: Values in criminal justice
9 A moral in the story? Virtues, values and desistance from crime
Fergus McNeill and Stephen Farrall
10 The value of values in probation practice?
Jean Henderson
11 Developments in police education in England and Wales: values, culture and ‘common sense’ policing
Craig Paterson and Ed Pollock
12 Race, religion and human rights: valuable lessons from prison
Muzammil Quraishi
13 The public-private divide: which side is criminal justice on?
Stephen Riley
14 Working with victims: values and validations
Marian Duggan
15 Money as the measure of man: values and value in the politics of reparation
Claire Moon
Section Three: Values in research, policy and practice
16 The Emperor’s new clothes: can Big Society deliver criminal justice?
Kevin Wong
17 What’s valuable, what’s valued in today’s youth justice?
Anne Robinson
18 Economic values and evidence: evaluating criminal justice policy
Kevin Albertson, Katherine Albertson, Chris Fox and Dan Ellingworth
19 Reflections on values and ethics in narrative inquiry with (ex-)offenders
Paula Hamilton and Katherine Albertson
20 Working with different values: extremism, hate and sex crimes
Malcolm Cowburn, Marian Duggan and Ed Pollock
21 Value for money? The politics of contract research
Paul Senior
Index
Notes on contributors
Section One: Values of criminological theories
1 Judging offenders: the moral implications of criminological theories
Simon Cottee
2 Postmodernism and criminological thought: ‘Whose science? Whose knowledge?’
Liz Austen with Malcolm Cowburn
3 Marxist criminology: whose side, which values?
David Moxon
4 A contemporary reflection on feminist criminology: whose side are we on?
Victoria Lavis and Tammi Walker
5 Bringing the boys back home: re-engendering criminology
Anthony Ellis and Maggie Wykes
6 New ‘racisms’ and prejudices? The criminalisation of ‘Asians’
Sunita Toor
7 The value(s) of cultural criminology
James Banks and David Moxon
8 Justifying ‘green’ criminology: values and ‘taking sides’ in an ecologically informed social science
Gary R. Potter
Section 2: Values in criminal justice
9 A moral in the story? Virtues, values and desistance from crime
Fergus McNeill and Stephen Farrall
10 The value of values in probation practice?
Jean Henderson
11 Developments in police education in England and Wales: values, culture and ‘common sense’ policing
Craig Paterson and Ed Pollock
12 Race, religion and human rights: valuable lessons from prison
Muzammil Quraishi
13 The public-private divide: which side is criminal justice on?
Stephen Riley
14 Working with victims: values and validations
Marian Duggan
15 Money as the measure of man: values and value in the politics of reparation
Claire Moon
Section Three: Values in research, policy and practice
16 The Emperor’s new clothes: can Big Society deliver criminal justice?
Kevin Wong
17 What’s valuable, what’s valued in today’s youth justice?
Anne Robinson
18 Economic values and evidence: evaluating criminal justice policy
Kevin Albertson, Katherine Albertson, Chris Fox and Dan Ellingworth
19 Reflections on values and ethics in narrative inquiry with (ex-)offenders
Paula Hamilton and Katherine Albertson
20 Working with different values: extremism, hate and sex crimes
Malcolm Cowburn, Marian Duggan and Ed Pollock
21 Value for money? The politics of contract research
Paul Senior
Index
Recenzii
“This book is an essential corrective to the tendency to discuss criminal justice solely in terms of effectiveness, efficiency, and economy. Well-known scholars are joined by newer voices in this wide-ranging and inter-disciplinary collection to show that criminal justice is irreducibly concerned with values and moral judgments.”
“This is a timely, imaginative, and thoughtful book that sets a new agenda for criminology. Examining allegiances and rights in different areas of criminological research, policy, and practice, the contributors pose some searching questions about values and ‘whose side we are on’.”