Criminal Justice Matters

Titel Veröffentlichungsdatum Sprache Zitate
The Pendleton Riot: a political sociology2012/03/01English5
‘What are we gonna do now?’ Revisiting the public roles of criminology2008/06/01English5
The theory and politics of criminalisation2008/12/01English5
Why combatting tax avoidance means curbing corporate power2013/12/01English5
Punishment and Rehabilitation – or punishment as rehabilitation2005/06/01English5
Bringing the penal voluntary sector to market2009/09/01English5
‘Target practice’: sanction detection and the criminalisation of children2008/09/01English4
Becoming iconic2008/09/01English4
Developing MAPPA: Multi-Agency Public Protection Arrangements2003/03/01English4
Localism and police reform – improving or fragmenting accountability?2011/12/01English4
Mothers in prison: the rights of the child2011/12/01English4
Targeting, labelling and stigma: challenging the criminalisation of children and young people2012/09/01English4
The contemporary role of private investigators in Australia2012/09/01English4
Preventing wildlife crime2012/12/01English4
Abolishing the stigma of punishments served2014/07/03English4
Racial profiling2015/04/03English4
Things can only get better2005/12/01English4
The quiet revolution: the rise and rise of out-of-court summary justice2009/03/01English4
Disclosing domestic violence2014/07/03English4
The violence of ‘terrorist organisation’ bans2010/12/01English4
PANOPTICON DAYS: Surveillance and Society1995/06/01English4
Obscured by Cameras?1994/09/01English4
FAST FORWARD TO VIOLENCE1993/03/01English4
The suspicious eye1998/09/01English4
License to cause harm? Sex entertainment venues and women's sense of safety in inner city centres2012/06/01English4
‘That's not my name’: prisoner deference and disciplinarian prison officers2011/06/01English4
Ethnographic imagination in the field of the prison2013/03/01English4
A tale of two utopias2008/12/01English4
Reform or abolition? Using popular mobilisations to dismantle the ‘prison-industrial complex'2009/09/01English4
Resistance as reform: direct action through prisoner movements, legal activism and the radical penal lobby2009/09/01English4