The Palgrave Handbook of Australian and New Zealand Criminology, Crime and Justice / edited by Antje Deckert, Rick Sarre.
2017
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Title
The Palgrave Handbook of Australian and New Zealand Criminology, Crime and Justice / edited by Antje Deckert, Rick Sarre.
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Imprint
Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017.
Description
XXIX, 916 pages 33 illustrations : online resource
Formatted Contents Note
Section I: The crime and justice landscape
1. Fifty years of Australian criminology; Duncan Chappell
2. A short history of New Zealand criminology; James Rodgers and Philip Stenning
3. Public sector criminological research; Russell G Smith
4. The Asian and Pacific Conference of Correctional Administrators; David Biles
5. Crime and justice data; Fiona Dowsley and Timothy Hart
6. Crime, news, and the media; Judy McGregor
7. Law reform targeting crime and disorder; Lorana Bartels and Rick Sarre
Section II: Patterns of crime
8. Mapping common crime; Jason Payne and Fiona Hutton
9. Violent crime; Stuart Ross and Kenneth Polk
10. Commercial armed robbery; Emmeline Taylor
11. Outlaw motorcycle gangs; Mark Lauchs and Jarrod Gilbert
12. Samoan youth crime; Laumua Tunufa'i
13. Domestic violence, violence in close relationships, and violence against women; Samantha Jeffries and Sharon Hayes
14. Sexual violence and harassment in the digital era; Anastasia Powell and Nicola Henry
15. Cybercrime; Roderic Broadhurst
16. Corporate and white collar crime; Fiona Haines
17. Corruption; Adam Graycar
18. Fraud victimisation and prevention; Tim Prenzler
19. Rural crime; Elaine Barclay
20. Transnational organised crime, border policing, and refugees; Michael Grewcock
Section III: State and non-state responses
21. A Gallipoli trope on Australian peacekeeping; John Braithwaite
22. Terrorism and anti-terrorism laws; Selda Dagistanli and Scott Poynting
23. New Zealand penal policy in the twenty-first century; John Pratt
24. Sentencing theories, practices, and trends; James C. Oleson
25. Indigenous sentencing courts in Australia; Elena Marchetti
26. Restorative justice; Masahiro Suzuki and William Wood
27. Emotion and language in restorative youth justice; Hennessey Hayes
28. Child witnesses in criminal courts; Kirsten Hanna and Emily Henderson
29. Children of prisoners; Catherine Flynn and Anna Eriksson
30. Redress for historical institutional abuse of children; Kathleen Daly
31. Privatisation of criminal justice; Alice Mills
32. The third sector in criminal justice; Janet Ransley and Lorraine Mazerolle
33. The pluralisation of policing; Trevor Bradley
34. Policing and crime policy; Andrew Goldsmith
35. The police complaints process; John Buttle and Antje Deckert
Section IV: Crime and justice through different theoretical lenses
36. Strain theory and crime; Li Eriksson and Lisa Broidy
37. Developmental and life-course criminology; Paul Mazerolle and Tara Renae McGee
38. Left realist criminology; David Brown
39. Feminist criminology; Kathryn Henne
40. Convict criminology; Greg Newbold
41. Green criminology; Rob White and Sarah Wright Monod
42. Narrative criminology; Mark Halsey
43. Victims, legal consciousness, and legal mobilisation; Robyn Holder
Section V: Indigenous perspectives on crime and justice
44. Indigenous peoples and criminal justice in Australia; Chris Cunneen and Amanda Porter
45. Māori experiences of colonisation and Māori criminology; Robert Webb
46. Colonial law, dominant discourses, and intergenerational trauma; Rawiri Waretini-Karena
47. Rangatahi courts; Khylee Quince
48. Māori and prison; Tracey McIntosh and Kim Workman
49. Crime and Māori in the media; Simone Bull
50. Doing research with the Indigenous domain as a non-Indigenous criminologist; Harry Blagg
51. Imagining an Indigenous criminological future; Juan Marcellus Tauri
Section VI: Crime prevention policies
52. Australian gun laws; Philip Alpers
53.Alcohol, policies; Joseph M. Boden
54. Developmental prevention; Ross Homel and Kate Freiberg
55. Rehabilitation programmes in Australian prisons; Karen Heseltine and Andrew Day
56. Criminal profiling; Geoff Dean and Sarah Yule.
1. Fifty years of Australian criminology; Duncan Chappell
2. A short history of New Zealand criminology; James Rodgers and Philip Stenning
3. Public sector criminological research; Russell G Smith
4. The Asian and Pacific Conference of Correctional Administrators; David Biles
5. Crime and justice data; Fiona Dowsley and Timothy Hart
6. Crime, news, and the media; Judy McGregor
7. Law reform targeting crime and disorder; Lorana Bartels and Rick Sarre
Section II: Patterns of crime
8. Mapping common crime; Jason Payne and Fiona Hutton
9. Violent crime; Stuart Ross and Kenneth Polk
10. Commercial armed robbery; Emmeline Taylor
11. Outlaw motorcycle gangs; Mark Lauchs and Jarrod Gilbert
12. Samoan youth crime; Laumua Tunufa'i
13. Domestic violence, violence in close relationships, and violence against women; Samantha Jeffries and Sharon Hayes
14. Sexual violence and harassment in the digital era; Anastasia Powell and Nicola Henry
15. Cybercrime; Roderic Broadhurst
16. Corporate and white collar crime; Fiona Haines
17. Corruption; Adam Graycar
18. Fraud victimisation and prevention; Tim Prenzler
19. Rural crime; Elaine Barclay
20. Transnational organised crime, border policing, and refugees; Michael Grewcock
Section III: State and non-state responses
21. A Gallipoli trope on Australian peacekeeping; John Braithwaite
22. Terrorism and anti-terrorism laws; Selda Dagistanli and Scott Poynting
23. New Zealand penal policy in the twenty-first century; John Pratt
24. Sentencing theories, practices, and trends; James C. Oleson
25. Indigenous sentencing courts in Australia; Elena Marchetti
26. Restorative justice; Masahiro Suzuki and William Wood
27. Emotion and language in restorative youth justice; Hennessey Hayes
28. Child witnesses in criminal courts; Kirsten Hanna and Emily Henderson
29. Children of prisoners; Catherine Flynn and Anna Eriksson
30. Redress for historical institutional abuse of children; Kathleen Daly
31. Privatisation of criminal justice; Alice Mills
32. The third sector in criminal justice; Janet Ransley and Lorraine Mazerolle
33. The pluralisation of policing; Trevor Bradley
34. Policing and crime policy; Andrew Goldsmith
35. The police complaints process; John Buttle and Antje Deckert
Section IV: Crime and justice through different theoretical lenses
36. Strain theory and crime; Li Eriksson and Lisa Broidy
37. Developmental and life-course criminology; Paul Mazerolle and Tara Renae McGee
38. Left realist criminology; David Brown
39. Feminist criminology; Kathryn Henne
40. Convict criminology; Greg Newbold
41. Green criminology; Rob White and Sarah Wright Monod
42. Narrative criminology; Mark Halsey
43. Victims, legal consciousness, and legal mobilisation; Robyn Holder
Section V: Indigenous perspectives on crime and justice
44. Indigenous peoples and criminal justice in Australia; Chris Cunneen and Amanda Porter
45. Māori experiences of colonisation and Māori criminology; Robert Webb
46. Colonial law, dominant discourses, and intergenerational trauma; Rawiri Waretini-Karena
47. Rangatahi courts; Khylee Quince
48. Māori and prison; Tracey McIntosh and Kim Workman
49. Crime and Māori in the media; Simone Bull
50. Doing research with the Indigenous domain as a non-Indigenous criminologist; Harry Blagg
51. Imagining an Indigenous criminological future; Juan Marcellus Tauri
Section VI: Crime prevention policies
52. Australian gun laws; Philip Alpers
53.Alcohol, policies; Joseph M. Boden
54. Developmental prevention; Ross Homel and Kate Freiberg
55. Rehabilitation programmes in Australian prisons; Karen Heseltine and Andrew Day
56. Criminal profiling; Geoff Dean and Sarah Yule.
Summary
This handbook engages key debates in Australian and New Zealand criminology over the last 50 years. In six sections, containing 56 original chapters, leading researchers and practitioners investigate topics such as the history of criminology; crime and justice data; law reform; gangs; youth crime; violent, white collar and rural crime; cybercrime; terrorism; sentencing; Indigenous courts; child witnesses and children of prisoners; police complaints processes; gun laws; alcohol policies; and criminal profiling. Key sections highlight criminological theory and, crucially, Indigenous issues and perspectives on criminal justice. Contributors examine the implications of past and current trends in official data collection, crime policy, and academic investigation to build up an understanding of under-researched and emerging problem areas for future research. An authoritative and comprehensive text, this handbook constitutes a long-awaited and necessary resource for dedicated academics, public policy analysts, and university students.
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Language
English
ISBN
9783319557472
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