ABSTRACT

Paul Rock began studying sociological criminology in 1961 and his intellectual history has run parallel to and in conversation with the evolution of the discipline over that long period. He became a professional scholar when symbolic interactionism, sociological phenomenology and 'labelling theory' were taking form within criminology, and it is to those ways of viewing the social world that he still clings, although he has sought also to reflect critically upon them as time went by. Having completed a DPhil dissertation on debt collection as a moral career, and largely as a matter of serendipity, he was to take to empirical research just as policies for victims of crime were being developed by governments across the developed world and, finding himself embedded as a visitor in a Canadian federal criminal justice ministry when a federal-provincial task force was being mooted, he was able to embark on the first of a sequence of field studies of policy-making centred chiefly on victims. Those two interlaced preoccupations, theoretical and empirical, continually informed much, if not all, of his subsequent work, contributing to what has been, in effect, a running series of comparative ethnographies of government decision-making about the role of the victim in and around the criminal justice system.

chapter 1|16 pages

Observations on Debt Collection

chapter 6|14 pages

Witnesses and Space in a Crown Court

chapter 7|20 pages

Introduction

The Emergence of Criminological Theory

chapter 10|10 pages

Sociology and the Stereotype of the Police

chapter 11|16 pages

Murderers, Victims and ‘Survivors’

The Social Construction of Deviance

chapter 13|20 pages

Chronocentrism and British Criminology