Values in Criminology and Community Justice

Values in Criminology and Community Justice

by Anne Robinson (Editor), PaulSenior (Editor), Marian Duggan (Editor), Malcolm Cowburn (Editor)

Synopsis

The 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. It explores 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.

$164.56

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 384
Publisher: Policy Press
Published: 18 Sep 2013

ISBN 10: 1447300351
ISBN 13: 9781447300359

Media Reviews
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 judgements. Professor Robert Canton, De Montfort University Leicester
This is a timely, imaginative and thoughtful book which 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'. Professor Loraine Gelsthorpe, University of Cambridge. President of the British Society of Criminology
Author Bio
Malcolm Cowburn is Emeritus Professor of Applied Social Science at Sheffield Hallam University and Co-Chair of the British Society of Criminology Professional affairs and Ethics Committee. Marian Duggan is a senior lecturer in Criminology at Sheffield Hallam University whose research and teaching interests focus on gender, sexuality, hate crime victimisation and sexual offending. Anne Robinson is a senior lecturer at Sheffield Hallam University and leads the programme for probation officer training. She previously worked in youth justice and is a former YOT manager. Paul Senior is Professor of Probation Studies and Director of a contract research and consultancy centre, the Hallam Centre for Community Justice, at Sheffield Hallam University.