Understanding Crime Prevention: Social Control, Risk and Late Modernity (Crime and Justice Series)

Understanding Crime Prevention: Social Control, Risk and Late Modernity (Crime and Justice Series)

by Mike Maguire (Foreword), Gordon Hughes (Author), Gordon Hughes (Author), Mike Maguire (Foreword)

Synopsis

* How can criminological, sociological and historical perspectives illuminate the elusive concept of crime prevention?

* Are we witnessing a new governance of crime control?

* What are the futures of crime prevention in late modernity?

This book offers a comprehensive overview of current and historical debates about crime prevention in particular and social control more generally. It moves beyond the traditional boundaries of criminology and offers an original re-framing of the field of crime prevention based on a synthesis of exciting new thinking in social theory. In particular, recent theorising around late modernity, risk society, communitarianism and globalization are put forward as important ways of linking trends in crime prevention to wider social transformations.

This innovative text looks at the contested history of crime prevention in the modern era and considers present and future trends in social control in late modernity. Hughes focuses on the question of the managerialization of crime prevention in recent decades, the extent to which crime control may become dominated by privatized security and insurance against risks, and the attractions and pitfalls of informal community-based approaches. Understanding Crime Prevention will be essential reading for students and researchers in the field as well as many professional and lay people interested in crime prevention and community safety.

$3.36

Save:$34.21 (91%)

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 179
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: Open University Press
Published: 01 Oct 1998

ISBN 10: 0335199402
ISBN 13: 9780335199402

Media Reviews
...this is as good and as readily understandable on the subject of crime statistics as you are ever likely to find. -New Law Journal
Author Bio
Gordon Hughes is a lecturer in Social Policy at the Open University. He has taught Sociology, Criminology and Social Policy at undergraduate and postgraduate level for over twenty years. He has researched and written widely in the fields of multi-agency crime prevention, social welfare, regulation and accountability of public services and communitarianism. His recent publications include Imagining Welfare Futures (1998) which he edited and Unsettling Welfare (1998), which he co-edited with Gail Lewis.