Criminal Justice and Regulation Revisited
Essays in Honour of Peter Grabosky
Herausgeber: Chang, Lennon Y C; Brewer, Russell
Criminal Justice and Regulation Revisited
Essays in Honour of Peter Grabosky
Herausgeber: Chang, Lennon Y C; Brewer, Russell
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This book celebrates the contributions of Peter Grabosky to the field of Criminology, and in particular, his work developing and adapting regulatory theory to the study of policing and security. This collection illustrates how his work has been instrumental in shaping scholarship and practice around the governance of security.
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This book celebrates the contributions of Peter Grabosky to the field of Criminology, and in particular, his work developing and adapting regulatory theory to the study of policing and security. This collection illustrates how his work has been instrumental in shaping scholarship and practice around the governance of security.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 220
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. März 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 12mm
- Gewicht: 318g
- ISBN-13: 9780367482541
- ISBN-10: 0367482541
- Artikelnr.: 60013933
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 220
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. März 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 12mm
- Gewicht: 318g
- ISBN-13: 9780367482541
- ISBN-10: 0367482541
- Artikelnr.: 60013933
Dr Lennon Y.C. Chang is a Senior Lecturer in Criminology in the School of Social Sciences at Monash University. He was previously Assistant Professor in the Department of Applied Social Studies at City University of Hong Kong. He is a founding member and Vice Chairman of the Asia Pacific Association of Technology and Society. He was an Endeavour Asia Award recipient, an Australia-China Emerging Leader, a Global Emerging Voices Fellow and an Australia-China Youth Dialogue Fellow. Dr Chang researches crime and governance of cyberspace - cybercrime, cyber terrorism and cyber warfare, particularly in the greater China region. He is currently researching internet vigilantism as well as cybercrime and cyber-deviance among juveniles in the Asia-pacific region. Dr Chang received his PhD from the Regulatory Institutions Network at the Australian National University, under the supervision of Professor Peter Grabosky. Dr Russell Brewer is a Senior Lecturer and Teaching Program Director for Criminology at Flinders University. He completed his PhD under Peter Grabosky's supervision at the Australian National University. His research interests include cybercrime, crime prevention, policing and social networks. He has published his findings through several leading publication outlets, holds multiple nationally competitive grants, and has been called upon by Government Agencies both domestically and abroad to advise on policy.
Preface: The light on the hill
John Braithwaite
Part 1: Setting the scene. 1. Peter Grabosky: At the interface of criminal justice and regulation
Russell Brewer and Lennon Y.C. Chang
Part 2: State as sponsors of regulatory activity. 2. Regulation beyond the state: The role of non-state actors
Lorraine Cherney and Adrian Cherney
3. Meta-regulating transnational environmental crime for better outcomes
Julie Ayling
Part 3: Second and third parties as sponsors of regulatory activity. 4. Regulating through enrolment: Emerging conceptions of police as public health interventionists
Jennifer Wood
5. Co-producing prosecution: Old and new third party forms
Robyn Holder
6. Non-state actors as brokers of crime control: Accounting for entrepreneurialism on the waterfront
Russell Brewer
7. Using regulatory pluralism to achieve effective control of Somali piracy: A model for other piracy-prone regions
Jade Lindley
8. Old wine
opaque bottles? Assessing the role of Internet intermediaries in the detection of cybercrime
Gregor Urbas
9. Internet Vigilantism: Co-production of security and compliance in the digital age
Lennon Y.C. Chang
Part 4: New regulatory dimensions. 10. The global anti-cybercrime network: Mapping the polycentric regulation of online harms
Benoît Dupont
11. Conclusions
Lennon Y.C. Chang and Russell Brewer
Epilogue
Roderic Broadhurst
John Braithwaite
Part 1: Setting the scene. 1. Peter Grabosky: At the interface of criminal justice and regulation
Russell Brewer and Lennon Y.C. Chang
Part 2: State as sponsors of regulatory activity. 2. Regulation beyond the state: The role of non-state actors
Lorraine Cherney and Adrian Cherney
3. Meta-regulating transnational environmental crime for better outcomes
Julie Ayling
Part 3: Second and third parties as sponsors of regulatory activity. 4. Regulating through enrolment: Emerging conceptions of police as public health interventionists
Jennifer Wood
5. Co-producing prosecution: Old and new third party forms
Robyn Holder
6. Non-state actors as brokers of crime control: Accounting for entrepreneurialism on the waterfront
Russell Brewer
7. Using regulatory pluralism to achieve effective control of Somali piracy: A model for other piracy-prone regions
Jade Lindley
8. Old wine
opaque bottles? Assessing the role of Internet intermediaries in the detection of cybercrime
Gregor Urbas
9. Internet Vigilantism: Co-production of security and compliance in the digital age
Lennon Y.C. Chang
Part 4: New regulatory dimensions. 10. The global anti-cybercrime network: Mapping the polycentric regulation of online harms
Benoît Dupont
11. Conclusions
Lennon Y.C. Chang and Russell Brewer
Epilogue
Roderic Broadhurst
Preface: The light on the hill
John Braithwaite
Part 1: Setting the scene. 1. Peter Grabosky: At the interface of criminal justice and regulation
Russell Brewer and Lennon Y.C. Chang
Part 2: State as sponsors of regulatory activity. 2. Regulation beyond the state: The role of non-state actors
Lorraine Cherney and Adrian Cherney
3. Meta-regulating transnational environmental crime for better outcomes
Julie Ayling
Part 3: Second and third parties as sponsors of regulatory activity. 4. Regulating through enrolment: Emerging conceptions of police as public health interventionists
Jennifer Wood
5. Co-producing prosecution: Old and new third party forms
Robyn Holder
6. Non-state actors as brokers of crime control: Accounting for entrepreneurialism on the waterfront
Russell Brewer
7. Using regulatory pluralism to achieve effective control of Somali piracy: A model for other piracy-prone regions
Jade Lindley
8. Old wine
opaque bottles? Assessing the role of Internet intermediaries in the detection of cybercrime
Gregor Urbas
9. Internet Vigilantism: Co-production of security and compliance in the digital age
Lennon Y.C. Chang
Part 4: New regulatory dimensions. 10. The global anti-cybercrime network: Mapping the polycentric regulation of online harms
Benoît Dupont
11. Conclusions
Lennon Y.C. Chang and Russell Brewer
Epilogue
Roderic Broadhurst
John Braithwaite
Part 1: Setting the scene. 1. Peter Grabosky: At the interface of criminal justice and regulation
Russell Brewer and Lennon Y.C. Chang
Part 2: State as sponsors of regulatory activity. 2. Regulation beyond the state: The role of non-state actors
Lorraine Cherney and Adrian Cherney
3. Meta-regulating transnational environmental crime for better outcomes
Julie Ayling
Part 3: Second and third parties as sponsors of regulatory activity. 4. Regulating through enrolment: Emerging conceptions of police as public health interventionists
Jennifer Wood
5. Co-producing prosecution: Old and new third party forms
Robyn Holder
6. Non-state actors as brokers of crime control: Accounting for entrepreneurialism on the waterfront
Russell Brewer
7. Using regulatory pluralism to achieve effective control of Somali piracy: A model for other piracy-prone regions
Jade Lindley
8. Old wine
opaque bottles? Assessing the role of Internet intermediaries in the detection of cybercrime
Gregor Urbas
9. Internet Vigilantism: Co-production of security and compliance in the digital age
Lennon Y.C. Chang
Part 4: New regulatory dimensions. 10. The global anti-cybercrime network: Mapping the polycentric regulation of online harms
Benoît Dupont
11. Conclusions
Lennon Y.C. Chang and Russell Brewer
Epilogue
Roderic Broadhurst