Regulation and Criminal Justice
Innovations in Policy and Research
Herausgeber: Quirk, Hannah; Smith, Graham; Seddon, Toby
Regulation and Criminal Justice
Innovations in Policy and Research
Herausgeber: Quirk, Hannah; Smith, Graham; Seddon, Toby
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An innovative, inter-disciplinary, critical exploration of the relationships between regulatory theory and criminal justice practice and scholarship.
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An innovative, inter-disciplinary, critical exploration of the relationships between regulatory theory and criminal justice practice and scholarship.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 342
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. Januar 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 496g
- ISBN-13: 9781107417007
- ISBN-10: 1107417007
- Artikelnr.: 40952679
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 342
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. Januar 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 496g
- ISBN-13: 9781107417007
- ISBN-10: 1107417007
- Artikelnr.: 40952679
1. Regulation and criminal justice: exploring the connections and
disconnections Graham Smith, Toby Seddon and Hannah Quirk; Part I.
Regulation and Criminal Justice: Framing the Debate: 2. Regulation and its
relationship with the criminal justice process Anthony Ogus; 3. Reconciling
the apparently different goals of criminal justice and regulation: the
'freedom' perspective Andrew Sanders; 4. On the interface of criminal
justice and regulation Peter Grabosky; Part II. Criminal Justice as
Regulation: Responsivity, Alternatives and Expansion: 5. Nodal governance
and the Zwelethemba model Clifford Shearing and Jan Froestad; 6. Regulatory
compliance: organisational capacities and regulatory strategies for
environmental protection Gary Lynch-Wood and David Williamson; 7. An
intoxicated politics of regulation David Whyte; 8. Governing by civil
order: towards new frameworks of support, coercion and sanction? John Flint
and Caroline Hunter; 9. Counter-terrorism and community relations:
anticipatory risk, regulation and justice Gabriel Mythen and Palash
Kamruzzaman; Part III. Regulation of Criminal Justice: Monitoring,
Effectiveness and Accountability: 10. The regulation of criminal justice -
inspectorates, ombudsmen and inquiries Anne Owers; 11. Rethinking prison
inspection: regulating institutions of confinement Toby Seddon; 12.
Regulating democracy: justice, citizenship and inequality in Brazil Barbara
Hudson.
disconnections Graham Smith, Toby Seddon and Hannah Quirk; Part I.
Regulation and Criminal Justice: Framing the Debate: 2. Regulation and its
relationship with the criminal justice process Anthony Ogus; 3. Reconciling
the apparently different goals of criminal justice and regulation: the
'freedom' perspective Andrew Sanders; 4. On the interface of criminal
justice and regulation Peter Grabosky; Part II. Criminal Justice as
Regulation: Responsivity, Alternatives and Expansion: 5. Nodal governance
and the Zwelethemba model Clifford Shearing and Jan Froestad; 6. Regulatory
compliance: organisational capacities and regulatory strategies for
environmental protection Gary Lynch-Wood and David Williamson; 7. An
intoxicated politics of regulation David Whyte; 8. Governing by civil
order: towards new frameworks of support, coercion and sanction? John Flint
and Caroline Hunter; 9. Counter-terrorism and community relations:
anticipatory risk, regulation and justice Gabriel Mythen and Palash
Kamruzzaman; Part III. Regulation of Criminal Justice: Monitoring,
Effectiveness and Accountability: 10. The regulation of criminal justice -
inspectorates, ombudsmen and inquiries Anne Owers; 11. Rethinking prison
inspection: regulating institutions of confinement Toby Seddon; 12.
Regulating democracy: justice, citizenship and inequality in Brazil Barbara
Hudson.
1. Regulation and criminal justice: exploring the connections and
disconnections Graham Smith, Toby Seddon and Hannah Quirk; Part I.
Regulation and Criminal Justice: Framing the Debate: 2. Regulation and its
relationship with the criminal justice process Anthony Ogus; 3. Reconciling
the apparently different goals of criminal justice and regulation: the
'freedom' perspective Andrew Sanders; 4. On the interface of criminal
justice and regulation Peter Grabosky; Part II. Criminal Justice as
Regulation: Responsivity, Alternatives and Expansion: 5. Nodal governance
and the Zwelethemba model Clifford Shearing and Jan Froestad; 6. Regulatory
compliance: organisational capacities and regulatory strategies for
environmental protection Gary Lynch-Wood and David Williamson; 7. An
intoxicated politics of regulation David Whyte; 8. Governing by civil
order: towards new frameworks of support, coercion and sanction? John Flint
and Caroline Hunter; 9. Counter-terrorism and community relations:
anticipatory risk, regulation and justice Gabriel Mythen and Palash
Kamruzzaman; Part III. Regulation of Criminal Justice: Monitoring,
Effectiveness and Accountability: 10. The regulation of criminal justice -
inspectorates, ombudsmen and inquiries Anne Owers; 11. Rethinking prison
inspection: regulating institutions of confinement Toby Seddon; 12.
Regulating democracy: justice, citizenship and inequality in Brazil Barbara
Hudson.
disconnections Graham Smith, Toby Seddon and Hannah Quirk; Part I.
Regulation and Criminal Justice: Framing the Debate: 2. Regulation and its
relationship with the criminal justice process Anthony Ogus; 3. Reconciling
the apparently different goals of criminal justice and regulation: the
'freedom' perspective Andrew Sanders; 4. On the interface of criminal
justice and regulation Peter Grabosky; Part II. Criminal Justice as
Regulation: Responsivity, Alternatives and Expansion: 5. Nodal governance
and the Zwelethemba model Clifford Shearing and Jan Froestad; 6. Regulatory
compliance: organisational capacities and regulatory strategies for
environmental protection Gary Lynch-Wood and David Williamson; 7. An
intoxicated politics of regulation David Whyte; 8. Governing by civil
order: towards new frameworks of support, coercion and sanction? John Flint
and Caroline Hunter; 9. Counter-terrorism and community relations:
anticipatory risk, regulation and justice Gabriel Mythen and Palash
Kamruzzaman; Part III. Regulation of Criminal Justice: Monitoring,
Effectiveness and Accountability: 10. The regulation of criminal justice -
inspectorates, ombudsmen and inquiries Anne Owers; 11. Rethinking prison
inspection: regulating institutions of confinement Toby Seddon; 12.
Regulating democracy: justice, citizenship and inequality in Brazil Barbara
Hudson.