ABSTRACT

In this book six leading criminologists address the central issues of ideology, crime and criminal justice in a series of essays originally presented at a symposium held in honour of Sir Leon Radzinowicz in Cambridge in March 2001. This book is concerned with the key themes of the history of criminal justice, the history and development of criminological thought, and criminal justice policy. Each of the contributed chapters makes an original and important contribution to the development of the discipline of criminology. This book is valuable reading for anybody interested in the past and present of the discipline of criminology, explored through essays on morality, prisons, policing, criminal justice and penal policy.

part 1|51 pages

Theory

chapter 1|17 pages

Ideology and crime

A further chapter

part 2|41 pages

History

chapter 3|19 pages

Gentlemen convicts, Dynamitards and paramilitaries

The limits of criminal justice

chapter 4|20 pages

The English police

A unique development?

part 3|56 pages

Prisons

chapter 5|54 pages

A ‘liberal regime within a secure perimeter'?

Dispersal prisons and penal practice in the late twentieth century

part 4|22 pages

Research and Policy

chapter 6|20 pages

Criminology and penal policy

The vital role of empirical research