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ROUTLEDGE<br />

Criminology and<br />

Criminal Justice<br />

New Titles and Key Backlist 2012<br />

www.routledge.com/criminology


Criminology and Justice Studies Series<br />

Edited by Chester Britt, Northeastern University, Shaun L. Gabbidon,<br />

Penn State Harrisburg, and Nancy Rodriguez, Arizona State University<br />

Criminology and Justice Studies publishes books for undergraduate<br />

and graduate courses that model the best scholarship and innovative<br />

thinking in the criminology and criminal justice field today, but in a<br />

style that connects this scholarship to a wide audience of students,<br />

researchers, and possibly the general public.<br />

We are particularly interested in proposals that offer a global<br />

perspective on crime and justice, that present a novel approach to more<br />

traditional areas of study, or that develop a new way to incorporate the<br />

wide and evolving array of digital technologies available to college and<br />

university instructors.<br />

If you have a publishing project to propose, we look forward to hearing<br />

from you! Please contact any of our Series Editors or the <strong>Routledge</strong><br />

Editor, Joseph Parry.<br />

Chester Britt, c.britt@neu.edu<br />

Shaun Gabbidon, slg13@psu.edu<br />

Nancy Rodriguez, nancy.rodriguez@asu.edu<br />

Joseph Parry, joseph.parry@taylorandfrancis.com


www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

Welcome to <strong>Routledge</strong><br />

Criminology and Criminal Justice<br />

New Titles and Key Backlist 2012<br />

CONTENTS<br />

Introduction to Criminology Textbooks ..............................3<br />

General Criminology ............................................7<br />

Methods and Data ............................................11<br />

Race, Class, Gender and Crime ...................................12<br />

Crime and Society .............................................17<br />

Social Policy .................................................22<br />

Policing and Crime Control ......................................24<br />

Criminal Justice ...............................................29<br />

Cultural Criminology ...........................................38<br />

Forms of Crime ...............................................38<br />

Historical Criminology ..........................................42<br />

Youth and Crime .............................................43<br />

Forensic Criminology. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46<br />

Index ......................................................49<br />

Order Form ..................................................52<br />

CONTACTS<br />

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Marketing:<br />

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Email: gemma.walker@tandf.co.uk<br />

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Editorial:<br />

Tom Sutton – Commissioning Editor<br />

Email: thomas.sutton@tandf.co.uk<br />

Nicola Hartley – Editorial Assistant<br />

Email: nicola.hartley@tandf.co.uk<br />

Journals:<br />

Online: www.tandfonline.com<br />

Email: tf.enquiries@informa.com<br />

Call: +44 (0)20 7017 5544<br />

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US, CANADA AND LATIN AMERICA<br />

Marketing:<br />

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Email: david.jurman@taylorandfrancis.com<br />

Samantha Barbaro – Marketing Assistant<br />

Email: samantha.barbaro@taylorandfrancis.com<br />

Editorial:<br />

Joseph Parry – Commissioning Editor<br />

Email: joseph.parry@taylorandfrancis.com<br />

Max Novick – Commissioning Editor, Research<br />

Email: max.novick@taylorandfrancis.com<br />

Jennifer Morrow – Editorial Assistant, Research<br />

Email: jennifer.morrow@taylorandfrancis.com<br />

Journals:<br />

Online: www.tandfonline.com<br />

Email: customerservice@taylorandfrancis.com<br />

Call: Toll Free: 1-800-354-1420<br />

Overseas: 1-215-625-8900<br />

eBook and Online Sales:<br />

Email: e-reference@taylorandfrancis.com<br />

Call: 1-888-318-2367<br />

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Jessie Taylor – Academic Sales Representative<br />

Email: jessie.taylor@taylorandfrancis.com<br />

Tel: (800) 634-7064 x 5098<br />

Prices, publication dates and content are correct at time of going to press, but may be subject to change without notice.<br />

CONSIDERING BOOKS<br />

FOR COURSE USE?<br />

This symbol shows books that are<br />

available as complimentary exam copies<br />

for lecturers or faculty considering them<br />

for course adoption. To obtain your copy<br />

visit the URL listed beneath the title in the<br />

catalog and select your choice of print or<br />

electronic copy. Visit www.routledge.com<br />

or in the US you can call 1-800-634-7064.<br />

This symbol shows books that are available<br />

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The Easy Way to Order<br />

Ordering online is fast and efficient, simply<br />

follow the on-screen instructions. Alternatively,<br />

you can call, fax, or see order form at the back<br />

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eUpdates<br />

Register your email address at<br />

www.tandf.co.uk/eupdates to receive<br />

information on books, journals and other news<br />

within your area of interest.<br />

Trade Customers’ Representatives,<br />

Agents and Distribution<br />

For a complete list, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/representatives.<br />

eBooks<br />

There are over 23,000 eBooks available across the<br />

humanities, social sciences, behavioural sciences,<br />

built environment, STM and law from some of<br />

the world’s leading imprints for individual and<br />

institutional purchase.<br />

– Individuals<br />

Download full titles or just the pages or chapters<br />

needed. You can also print or copy pages or<br />

chapters of choice, compile your own eBook<br />

or rent a title for 1 day, right up to 6 months.<br />

Full details are on www.ebookstore.tandf.co.uk.<br />

– Libraries and Institutions<br />

Subscribe or purchase a ready made package<br />

or pick & mix your own from our complete<br />

collection (50 title minimum). 30 day free trials<br />

are available. For more information, visit:<br />

www.ebooksubscriptions.com or contact your<br />

local sales team.


2<br />

ROUTLEDGE CRIMINOLOGY AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE UK COURSE GUIDE<br />

ROUTLEDGE CRIMINOLOGY AND<br />

CRIMINAL JUSTICE COURSE GUIDE<br />

This quick reference grid highlights just a few of the textbooks and supporting additional reading material that<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Criminology offers. To find out about the full range of titles in any area of Criminology, please contact<br />

Jessie.Taylor@taylorandfrancis.com.<br />

INTRODUCTION TO<br />

CRIMINOLOGY<br />

Criminology, Newburn p3<br />

Key Readings in Criminology, Newburn p3<br />

Criminology: A Sociological Introduction p5<br />

Crime and Criminal Justice, Marsh et al p5<br />

Criminology: The Basics, Walklate p9<br />

INTRODUCTION TO CRIMINAL<br />

JUSTICE<br />

Criminal Justice 2e, Joyce p4<br />

Understanding Criminal Justice p5<br />

CRIMINOLOGICAL THEORY<br />

An Introduction to Criminological Theory, Hopkins-Burke p4<br />

Key Readings in Criminology, Newburn p3<br />

Criminal Justice Theory, Hopkins-Burke p35<br />

Criminal Justice Theory, Duffee and Maguire p7<br />

Contemporary Critical Criminology, DeKeseredy p9<br />

Fifty Key Thinkers in Criminology p42<br />

Delinquency Theories p45<br />

RESEARCH METHODS AND<br />

CRIMINOLOGY<br />

Researching Crime and Justice, Westmarland p7<br />

Regression Analysis for the Social Sciences p11<br />

GIS and Spatial Analysis for the Social Sciences p11<br />

Social Statistics p11<br />

Contemporary Critical Theory and Methodology p12<br />

Visual Research Methods in the Social Sciences p11<br />

CRIMINAL JUSTICE POLICY<br />

Social Work Practice in the Criminal Justice System p36<br />

The Policy Making Process in the Criminal Justice System p5<br />

WHITE COLLAR CRIME<br />

Today’s White Collar Crime p7<br />

White Collar Crime p7<br />

The Corporate Criminal p20<br />

GENDER AND CRIME<br />

Sex, Crime and Morality p12<br />

Violence Against Women p13<br />

Feminist Criminology p15<br />

Confronting Global Gender Justice p15<br />

Handbook on Sexual Violence p39<br />

CRIME AND JUSTICE<br />

Criminal Recidivism p17<br />

Foundations of Offender Rehabilitation p18<br />

Crime and the Lifecourse p19<br />

Understanding Hate Crimes p9<br />

Dangerousness, Risk and the Governance of Serious Sexual<br />

and Violent Offenders p30<br />

Legitimacy and Compliance in Criminal Justice p31<br />

Probation p32<br />

Probation: Key Readings p33<br />

Working with Women Offenders in the Community p16<br />

Offender Supervision p32<br />

Redemption, Rehabilitation and Risk Management p43<br />

CRIME AND TECHNOLOGY<br />

Eyes Everywhere p18<br />

Surveillance p23<br />

GLOBAL CRIMINOLOGY<br />

Security p8<br />

Suicide Bombings p20<br />

The Sociology of Terrorism p19<br />

Intelligence and Intelligence Analysis p25<br />

Comparative Criminal Justice p30<br />

State Crime p39<br />

Torturing Terrorists p39<br />

Transnational Environmental Crime p40<br />

Human Trafficking p40<br />

CRIME AND MEDIA<br />

Crime, Policy and the Media p38<br />

RESTORATIVE JUSTICE<br />

Restorative Justice, Johnstone p22<br />

Restorative Justice in Practice p22<br />

A Restorative Justice Reader p29<br />

PRISONS<br />

Prison Policy in Ireland p22<br />

Penal Exceptionalism? p32<br />

Prisoners’ Rights p32<br />

The Prison Officer p33<br />

The Prisoner p34<br />

Lifers p35<br />

POLICING<br />

Changing Police Theories p24<br />

Handbook of Policing p24<br />

Handbook of Crime Prevention and Community Safety p24<br />

Just Authority? p25<br />

Police Cultures p24<br />

Police Interviewing p26<br />

Police Work p26<br />

Policing: Key Readings p26<br />

Policing Sex p26<br />

The Police in an Age of Austerity? p27<br />

Community Policing p27<br />

Policing, Kempa p28<br />

YOUTH AND CRIME<br />

Doing Justice to Young People p43<br />

Effective Practice in Youth Justice p44<br />

Evidence Based Policy and Practice in Youth Justice p44<br />

Youth in Crisis? p45<br />

FORENSIC CRIMINOLOGY<br />

AND CRIME ANALYSIS<br />

Environmental Criminology and Crime Analysis p46<br />

Forensic Criminology p46<br />

Managing Clinical Risk p47<br />

Professionalizing Offender Profiling p47<br />

Psychological Criminology p46<br />

Research in Practice for Forensic Professionals p47<br />

Secure Recovery p47<br />

Biosocial Criminology p46<br />

Psychology and Crime p48<br />

Crime Scenes p48<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website


EDITORS’<br />

NOTE<br />

Dear Reader,<br />

We are delighted to welcome you to the<br />

Criminology Catalogue 2012. There was a<br />

fascinating article on the radical overhaul<br />

of Operations Trident by the Metropolitan<br />

Police, which was posted as a link on the<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Twitter page (@<strong>Routledge</strong>_<br />

Crim). This has become a great place to<br />

keep up to date both with criminology<br />

and all of the latest books and offers from<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong>.<br />

We have a fantastic year ahead of<br />

publishing in criminology both in the UK<br />

and US at <strong>Routledge</strong>. As well as a brand<br />

new edition of Peter Joyce’s Criminal<br />

Justice (page 4) textbook later in the year,<br />

we have a major new Handbook in<br />

Surveillance Studies (page 9) edited by<br />

Kirstie Ball, Kevin Haggerty and David<br />

Lyon and some fantastic additions to the<br />

Key Ideas in Criminology series,<br />

including Claire Renzetti’s long awaited<br />

Feminist Criminology (page 15). We are<br />

also very excited about our new titles,<br />

Voices from Criminal Justice (page 6),<br />

When Crime Appears (page 36), and<br />

A Theory of African American<br />

Offending (page 16).<br />

We are particularly thrilled this year about<br />

commissioning new titles for a brand new<br />

series we are launching. New Directions<br />

in Critical Criminology (page 6) is edited<br />

by Walter DeKeseredy and aims to offer<br />

short original contributions to a major<br />

contemporary issue of central concern to<br />

critical criminologists around the world<br />

and set out an agenda for progressive<br />

ways of thinking critically about crime,<br />

law, and social control (please contact<br />

Tom Sutton for more details).<br />

It is a constant pleasure to work with such<br />

a fantastic bunch of authors and series<br />

editors. As always, we’d be happy to hear<br />

from you if you had a new idea for a book<br />

or any feedback about the list in general.<br />

Thanks,<br />

Tom Sutton<br />

Criminology Commissioning Editor UK<br />

thomas.sutton@tandf.co.uk<br />

And<br />

Joseph Parry<br />

Criminology Commissioning Editor US<br />

joseph.parry@taylorandfrancis.com<br />

INTRODUCTION TO CRIMINOLOGY TEXTBOOKS<br />

INTRODUCTION<br />

TO CRIMINOLOGY<br />

TEXTBOOKS<br />

BESTSELLER<br />

Key Readings in Criminology<br />

Edited by Tim Newburn, London School of<br />

Economics and Political Science, UK<br />

‘It’s a terrific collection and<br />

nothing nearly as good<br />

exists elsewhere.’ – Jonathan<br />

Simon, University of California<br />

Berkeley<br />

Key Readings in Criminology<br />

provides a comprehensive<br />

single-volume collection of<br />

readings in criminology. It<br />

provides students with<br />

convenient access to a broad<br />

range of excerpts (over 150<br />

readings) from original criminological texts and key<br />

articles, and is designed to be used either as a<br />

stand-alone text or in conjunction with the same<br />

author’s textbook, Criminology.<br />

This volume can be used in a number of ways in support<br />

of the study of criminology:<br />

• as a source of both ‘key’ and supplementary reading<br />

for lectures<br />

• as the basis for organized reading in advance of<br />

seminars and tutorials<br />

• as the basis for classroom discussion and analysis<br />

• as a broad source of reading for exam revision<br />

• in addition it provides students with access to a broad<br />

range of materials with which to follow up their<br />

reading of their main textbook<br />

• includes readings that include both more recent<br />

summaries of particularly important criminological<br />

issues as well as excerpts from criminological classics<br />

• introduces students not only to criminological<br />

argument and debate but also encourages them to<br />

read primary as well as secondary or summary sources.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Understanding Crime and<br />

Criminology 2. Crime and Punishment in History 3. Crime<br />

Data and Crime Trends 4. Crime and the Media<br />

5. Classicism and Positivism 6. Biological Positivism<br />

7. Psychological Positivism 8. Durkheim, Anomie and Strain<br />

9. The Chicago School: Culture and Subcultures<br />

10. Interactionism and Labelling Theory 11. Control Theories<br />

12. Radical and Critical Criminology 13. Left and Right<br />

Realism 14. Contemporary Classicism 15. Feminist<br />

Criminology 16. Late Modernity, Governmentality and Risk<br />

17 .Victims, Victimization and Victimology 18. White-Collar<br />

and Corporate Crime 19. Organized Crime 20. Violent and<br />

Property Crime 21. Drugs and Alcohol 22. Penology and<br />

Punishment 23. Understanding Criminal Justice 24. Crime<br />

Prevention and Community Safety 25. The Police and<br />

Policing 26. Criminal Courts and the Court Process<br />

27. Sentencing and Non-Custodial Penalties 28. Prisons and<br />

Imprisonment 29. Youth Crime and Youth Justice<br />

30. Restorative Justice 31. Race, Crime and Justice<br />

32. Gender, Crime and Justice 33. Criminal and Forensic<br />

Psychology 34. Globalisation, Terrorism and Human Rights<br />

35. Doing Criminological Research<br />

2009: 264 x 193: 928pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-403-6: $158.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-402-9: $65.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843924029<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE:<br />

www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

BESTSELLER<br />

Criminology<br />

Tim Newburn, London School of Economics and<br />

Political Science, UK<br />

‘Newburn’s distinctive<br />

accomplishment in this book<br />

is the combination of<br />

accessibility and scholarship,<br />

achieving (near<br />

comprehensive) breadth<br />

without compromise to<br />

depth... It is not easy to<br />

think of another<br />

criminologist who could<br />

have managed this nor or a<br />

better single volume to put<br />

in the hands of a criminology student.’ – Professor<br />

Rob Canton, De Montfort University, UK<br />

This is a comprehensive introduction to criminology for<br />

students who are either new or relatively new to the<br />

subject. It provides the basis of study for undergraduate<br />

students, new postgraduate students, and those who<br />

need a foundation knowledge of criminology for other<br />

relevant courses – including access and foundation<br />

degree courses in colleges and universities, courses in<br />

law, probation, policing, criminal and forensic<br />

investigation and on other aspects of crime and the<br />

criminal justice system. Key points include:<br />

• fully comprehensive – covering all major areas of<br />

criminology and criminal justice as well as guidance on<br />

disseration/long-essay writing<br />

• authoritative – written by a leading criminologist and<br />

experienced teacher<br />

• broad approach – moves beyond sociological<br />

approaches to crime and criminal justice to take<br />

account of the contribution of other disciplines<br />

• up-to-date – informed by QAA subject benchmarks for<br />

the teaching of criminology<br />

• extensively illustrated with photographs, charts, tables<br />

and diagrams and a range of questions for students to<br />

discuss and debate<br />

• additional website support for students and teachers.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: Understanding Crime and<br />

Criminology 1. Understanding Crime and Criminology<br />

2. Crime and Punishment in History 3. Crime Data and<br />

Crime Trends 4. Crime and the Media<br />

Part 2: Understanding Crime ? Theories and Concepts<br />

5. Classicism and Positivism 6. Biological Positivism<br />

7. Psychological Positivism 8. Durkheim, Anomie and Strain<br />

8. The Chicago School, Culture and Subcultures<br />

10. Interactionism and Labelling Theory 11. Control Theories<br />

12. Radical and Critical Criminology 13. Realist Criminology<br />

14. Contemporary Classicism 15. Feminist Criminology<br />

16. Late Modernity, Governmentality and Risk<br />

Part 3: Understanding Crime ? Types and Trends<br />

17. Victims, Victimization and Victimology 18. White-Collar<br />

and Corporate Crime 19. Organized Crime 20. Violent and<br />

Property Crime 21. Drugs and Alcohol<br />

Part 4: Understanding Criminal Justice 22. Penology and<br />

Punishment 23. Understanding Criminal Justice 24. Crime<br />

Prevention and Community Safety 25. The Police and<br />

Policing 26. Criminal Courts and the Court Process<br />

27. Sentencing and Non-Custodial Penalties 28. Prisons and<br />

Imprisonment 29. Youth Crime and Youth Justice<br />

30. Restorative Justice Part 5: Critical Issues in<br />

Criminology 31. Race, Crime and Justice 32. Gender,<br />

Crime and Justice 33. Criminal and Forensic Psychology<br />

34. Globalisation, Terrorism and Human Rights<br />

Part 6: Doing Criminology 35. Understanding<br />

Criminological Research 36. Doing Criminological Research<br />

2007: 264 x 193: 1046pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-285-8: $155.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-284-1: $62.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843922841<br />

3


4<br />

INTRODUCTION TO CRIMINOLOGY TEXTBOOKS<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

2nd Edition<br />

Criminal Justice<br />

An Introduction to Crime and the Criminal<br />

Justice System<br />

Peter Joyce, Manchester Metropolitan University,<br />

UK<br />

This new and expanded edition builds upon material<br />

from the highly successful first edition. A comprehensive<br />

textbook on the criminal justice system, the book<br />

assesses the main theories concerned with the causes of<br />

crime (including white-collar and corporate crime),<br />

discusses the operation of all key criminal justice<br />

agencies – including the police, probation and prison<br />

services and the legal and youth justice systems –and<br />

identifies the main themes underpinning contemporary<br />

criminal justice policy. Key additions include:<br />

• updated material from the first edition incorporating<br />

changes to criminal justice policy introduced by the<br />

2010 Coalition government<br />

• a new chapter that presents an overview of the<br />

criminal justice system<br />

• discussions of the evolving EU criminal justice system<br />

and the implications of this for UK criminal justice<br />

policy.<br />

The book is an ideal text for students taking courses in<br />

criminal justice, or studying criminal justice as a<br />

component of a broader course in criminology or the<br />

social sciences and practitoners within these fields. It is<br />

written in a highly accessible manner and has a wide<br />

range of features that include:<br />

• questions<br />

• key chapter themes<br />

• timeline of main events<br />

• glossary of key terms<br />

• website resource guide.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. The Causes Of Crime and Deviancy<br />

2. Crime and Crime Prevention 3. Overview of the Criminal<br />

Justice System 4. Policing 5. The Prosecution Process 6. The<br />

Judiciary 7. Punishment – Aims and Rationale 8. Prison and<br />

its Alternatives 9. The Juvenile Justice System 10. Race and<br />

The Criminal Justice System 11. The EU Dimension to the UK<br />

Criminal Justice System 12. Conclusion, Keeping<br />

Up-To-Date, Key Terms in Crime and Criminal Justice Policy.<br />

Index<br />

November 2012: 246 x 174: 588pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-62061-1: $130.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-62062-8: $49.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415620628<br />

BESTSELLER<br />

3rd Edition<br />

Corrections<br />

A Critical Approach<br />

Michael Welch, Rutgers University, USA<br />

‘I would be hard-pressed to<br />

identify another corrections<br />

textbook that I would<br />

seriously consider adopting<br />

over this one. The updated<br />

material is welcomed. The<br />

strength of the book<br />

remains, however, its critical<br />

approach to corrections and<br />

the attention it gives to<br />

history, ideology, and the<br />

ways in which social forces<br />

influence punishment.’<br />

– Jeanne Flavin, Fordham University<br />

‘In Corrections: A Critical Approach, Michael Welch<br />

overcomes the limitations of traditional analyses of<br />

the correctional field through his unique use of<br />

what he calls a critical approach … All considered,<br />

the coverage throughout the book is broad ranging<br />

and well rounded. In short Welch’s book on<br />

corrections is one of the best I have seen.’<br />

– Professor Michael J. Lynch, University of South Florida<br />

Corrections: A Critical Approach (third edition) confronts<br />

mass imprisonment in the United States, a nation<br />

boasting the highest incarceration rate in the world. This<br />

statistic is all the more troubling considering that its<br />

correctional population is overrepresented by the poor,<br />

African-Americans, and Latinos.<br />

Not only throwing crucial light on matters involving race<br />

and social class, this book also identifies and examines<br />

the key social forces shaping penal practice in the US<br />

– politics, economics, morality, and technology. By<br />

attending closely to historical and theoretical<br />

development, the narrative takes into account both<br />

instrumental (goal-oriented) as well as expressive<br />

(cultural) explanations to sharpen our understanding of<br />

punishment and the growing reliance on incarceration.<br />

Covering five main areas of inquiry – penal context,<br />

penal populations, penal violence, penal process, and<br />

penal state – this book is essential reading for both<br />

undergraduate and graduate students interested in<br />

undertaking a critical analysis of penology.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: Penal Context 1. Introducing a<br />

Critical Approach 2. A History of Punishment and Prisons<br />

3. America’s Penal Past 4. Theoretical Penology<br />

Part 2: Penal Populations 5. Social World of Prisoners<br />

6. Women in Corrections 7. Juveniles in Corrections<br />

8. Minorities in Corrections Part 3: Penal Violence<br />

9. Assaults and Riots 10. Death Penalty Part 4: Penal<br />

Process 11. Jails and Detention 12. Prisoners’ Rights<br />

13. Alternatives to Incarceration Part 5: Penal State<br />

14. Working in Prison 15. The Corrections Industry 16. War<br />

on Drugs 17. War on Terror<br />

March 2011: 178 x 254: 768pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-78208-1: $195.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-78209-8: $66.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415782098<br />

BESTSELLER<br />

3rd Edition<br />

An Introduction to<br />

Criminological Theory<br />

Roger Hopkins-Burke, Nottingham Trent University,<br />

UK<br />

This book provides a<br />

comprehensive and up-to-date<br />

introduction to criminological<br />

theory for students taking<br />

courses in criminology at both<br />

undergraduate and<br />

postgraduate level.<br />

The text is divided into five<br />

parts, the first three of which<br />

address ideal type models of<br />

criminal behaviour the rational<br />

actor, predestined actor, and<br />

victimized actor models. Within these the various<br />

criminological theories are located chronologically in the<br />

context of one of these different traditions, and the<br />

strengths and weaknesses of each theory and model are<br />

clearly identified. The fourth part of the book looks more<br />

closely at more recent attempts to integrate theoretical<br />

elements from both within and across models of criminal<br />

behaviour, while the fifth part addresses a number of<br />

key recent concerns of criminology – postmodernism,<br />

cultural criminology, globalization and<br />

communitarianism.<br />

2009: 246 x 174: 416pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-569-9: $125.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-407-4: $46.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843924074<br />

An Introduction to Criminal<br />

Psychology<br />

Russil Durrant, Victoria University of Wellington,<br />

New Zealand<br />

This book provides a comprehensive overview of<br />

approaches to understanding crime and criminal<br />

behaviour, with a focus on psychological perspectives. A<br />

wide range of different types of criminal behaviour are<br />

considered, including juvenile crime, violent offending,<br />

sexual offending, collective violence, drug use, and<br />

property and public disorder offending. For each type of<br />

offence a clear overview of key conceptual and<br />

methodological issues is provided along with a detailed<br />

consideration of the major theoretical approaches that<br />

have been developed. The book concludes by<br />

considering how our theoretical understanding of crime<br />

can inform our responses to criminal behaviour in terms<br />

of punishment, prevention and rehabilitation.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Theoretical<br />

Approaches To Understanding Criminal Behaviour 3. Juvenile<br />

Delinquency and Developmental Theories of Criminal<br />

Behaviour 4. Mental Disorder and Crime 5. Aggression and<br />

Violence 6. Violent Offending 7. Sexual Offending<br />

8. Collective Violence 9. Drugs and Crime 10. Property and<br />

Public Disorder Offending 11. Responding to Crime:<br />

Punishment, Prevention and Rehabilitation 12. Conclusion<br />

October 2012: 234x156: 246pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-378-7: $145.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-377-0: $44.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/978184323770<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website


FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

The Policy Making Process in<br />

the Criminal Justice System<br />

Adrian Barton and Nick Johns, both at University<br />

of Plymouth, UK<br />

How the state ‘deals with’ crime and criminality is a<br />

major issue for all students of criminology and criminal<br />

justice. This book offers a fresh perspective on the policy<br />

making process in the criminal justice system offering a<br />

detailed overview of both the theory behind it and how<br />

it plays out in practise with contemporary policy<br />

examples. Key features include:<br />

• a detailed analysis of the basic political concepts<br />

surrounding the relationship between the citizen and<br />

the state,<br />

• an overview of the state departments, organizations<br />

and individuals who are instrumental in creating and<br />

influencing policy,<br />

• an analysis of how criminal justice policy is interpreted<br />

and implemented on the street<br />

• a range of discussion points and suggested further<br />

readings.<br />

This text is perfect for the undergraduate taking<br />

modules in criminology, criminal justice and social and<br />

public policy as well as students taking courses on<br />

policing, probation and the voluntary sector.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. The Role of the State<br />

in the Policy Making Process 3.Policy, Politics and Ideology<br />

4. Decision Making and Agenda Setting – Choosing what is,<br />

and what is not, ‘Policy’ 5. Criminal Justice Policy Makers<br />

and Policy Making Bodies in England and Wales 6. Policy<br />

Implementation: Turning Ideas into Action 7. Joint Working<br />

8. Auditing, Evaluating and Managing Policy Implementation<br />

9. An Illustrative Case: Making Hate a Crime 10. Final<br />

Thoughts<br />

September 2012: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67014-2: $130.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-67017-3: $44.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415670173<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Understanding Criminal Justice<br />

A Critical Introduction<br />

BESTSELLER<br />

Azrini Wahidin and Nicola Carr, both at Queen’s University, UK<br />

2nd Edition<br />

Criminology<br />

A Sociological Introduction<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

INTRODUCTION TO CRIMINOLOGY TEXTBOOKS<br />

Eamonn Carrabine, Maggy Lee, Nigel South,<br />

Pam Cox and Ken Plummer<br />

‘Its topical and original<br />

approach makes this book<br />

definitely one of the most<br />

exciting introductions to<br />

criminology.’ – René van<br />

Swaaningen, Professor of<br />

International & Comparative<br />

Criminology, Erasmus University,<br />

the Netherlands<br />

The new edition of Criminology:<br />

A Sociological Introduction<br />

builds on the success of the first edition and now<br />

includes two new chapters: Crime, Place and Space, and<br />

Histories of Crime.<br />

More than a collection of orthodox thinking, this fully<br />

revised and updated textbook is also ground in original<br />

research, and offers a clear and insightful introduction to<br />

the key topics studied in undergraduate criminology<br />

courses, including<br />

• crime trends, from historical overview to recent crime<br />

patterns<br />

• criminal justice system, including policing and prisons<br />

• ways of thinking about crime and control, from the<br />

origins of criminology to contemporary theories<br />

• research methods used by criminologists<br />

• new topics within criminology including terrorism,<br />

cybercrime, human rights, and emotion.<br />

2008: 246 x 189: 560pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-46450-5: $205.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-46451-2: $53.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415464512<br />

Crime and Criminal Justice<br />

Ian Marsh, Gaynor Melville and Keith Morgan,<br />

all at Liverpool Hope University, UK, Gareth Norris,<br />

University of Aberystwyth, UK and John Cochrane,<br />

Liverpool Hope University, UK<br />

Crime and Criminal Justice<br />

provides students with a<br />

comprehensive and engaging<br />

introduction to the study of<br />

criminology by taking an<br />

interdisciplinary approach to<br />

explaining criminal behaviour<br />

and criminal justice.<br />

Presenting a clear and thorough<br />

review of theoretical thinking<br />

on crime, and of the context<br />

and current workings of the<br />

criminal justice system, this book provides students with<br />

an excellent grounding in the study of criminology.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: Exploring and Explaining<br />

Crime 1. Introduction – Crime: The Historical Context<br />

2. Biological Explanations for Criminal Behaviour<br />

3. Psychological Explanations for Criminal Behaviour<br />

4. Sociological Explanations for Criminal Behaviour<br />

5. Explaining the Criminal Behaviour of Women<br />

6. Explaining the Criminal Behaviour of Ethnic Minorities<br />

Part 2: Exploring and Explaining Criminal Justice<br />

7. Why Punish? Philosophies of Punishment 8. Theories of<br />

Punishment 9. The History of Crime and Justice<br />

10. Victimology 11. Police and Policing 12. The Courts,<br />

Sentencing and the Judiciary 13. Prisons and Imprisonment<br />

May 2011: 246 x 174: 536pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-58151-6: $155.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-58152-3: $49.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415581523<br />

This book is perfectly designed to meet the needs of the undergraduate student and lecturer of criminal justice providing a one-stop guide<br />

to criminal justice policy and practices. The authors offer a comprehensive overview of current debates and key issues in the delivery of<br />

criminal justice and examines how it operates in context and in practice.<br />

Offering a critical introduction to the issues, institutions and agencies which shape the operation of the criminal justice system, new areas<br />

such as ‘Developing your Criminological Imagination’, ‘Planning for a Career in Criminal Justice’, ‘Abolition’ and ‘Crime across the<br />

Life-Course’ are also covered. Key features include:<br />

• end of chapter questions which could be used as the starting point for seminar/training discussions<br />

• case studies of both offenders and practitioners intended to make the subject ‘come alive’<br />

• sources of further reading presented in the form of an annotated bibliography<br />

• end of chapter summaries<br />

• boxed features to include real-life cases, step-by-step procedures, and key concepts and debates.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. What is Crime? 2. What is Crime Justice? 3. Crime Across the Life-Course 4. Policing 5. Sentencing, Prosecution and Courts: Gender, Class and Ethnicity 6. The<br />

Rise of the Victim and the Role of Restorative Justice 7. Prisons and Abolition 8. Probation, Alternatives and Resettlement 9. Identity, Crime and Offending 10. Developing your<br />

‘Criminological Imagination’ and Planning for a Career in Criminal Justice<br />

November 2012: 234 x 156: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67021-0: $120.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-67022-7: $44.95<br />

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415670227<br />

5


6<br />

NEW<br />

INTRODUCTION TO CRIMINOLOGY TEXTBOOKS<br />

Voices from Criminal Justice<br />

Thinking and Reflecting on the System<br />

Edited by Heith Copes, University of Alabama at Birmingham, USA and Mark Pogrebin, University of Colorado, Denver, USA<br />

Series: Criminology and Justice Studies<br />

This innovative text/reader for undergraduate criminal justice courses in the United States provides a companion or alternative to traditional<br />

texts. Instead of providing a ‘catalog of information’ this book gives students rich insights into what it is like to work within the system (as<br />

practitioners) as well as from those who experience criminal justice as outsiders (as citizens, clients, jurors, probationers, or inmates).<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: Police 1. Saying One Thing, Meaning Another: The Role of Parables in Police Training Robert E. Ford 2. Humor in the<br />

Briefing Room: A Study of the Strategic Uses of Humor among Police Pogrebin Mark and Eric Poole 3. Social Context of Police Lying Jenifer Hunt<br />

and Peter Manning 4. Observations Regarding Key Operational Realities in a Compstat Model of Policing Dean Dabney 5. Reflections of African<br />

American Women on their Careers in Urban Policing Mark Pogrebin, Mary Dodge and Harold Chatman 6. Procedural Justice and Order Maintenance<br />

Policing Jacinta Gau and Rod Brunson 7. Sense-Making and Secondary Victimization Paul Stretesky 8. Legitimated Oppression Robert Duran<br />

9. Between Normality and Deviance: The Breakdown of Batterers’ Identity Following Police Intervention Buchbinder Eli and Zvi Eisikovits 10. Victims’<br />

Voices: Domestic Assault Victims’ Perceptions of Police Demeanor Joyce Stephens and Peter G. Sinden Part 2: Judicial 11. Maintaining the Myth of Individualized Justice: Probation<br />

Presentence Reports John Rosecrance 12. Calling Your Bluff: How Prosecutors and Defense Attorneys Adapt Plea Bargaining Strategies to Increased Formalization Deirdre M. Bowen<br />

13. But How Can You Sleep Nights In Lisa McIntyre 14. Discrediting Victims’ Allegations of Sexual Assault: Prosecutorial Accounts of Case Rejections Lisa Frohman 15. The Social<br />

Construction of Sophisticated Adolescents: How Judges Integrate Juvenile and Criminal Justice Decision-Making Models Alexes Harris 16. Female Recidivists Speak about their Experience<br />

in Drug Courts while Engaging in Appreciative Inquiry Michael Fischer, Brenda Geiger and Mary Ellen Hughes 17. Jurors’ Views of Civil Lawyers: Implications for Courtroom<br />

Communication Valerie P. Hans and Krista Sweigert 18. The Agencies of Abuse: Intimate Abusers’ Experiences of Presumptive Arrest and Prosecution Keith Guzik 19. Preparing to<br />

Testify: Rape Survivors Negotiating the Criminal Justice Process Amanda Konradi 20. Families of Murder Victims’ Perceptions of Prosecutors Sarah Goodrum Part 3: Corrections<br />

21. Women in Parole: Gendered Adaptations of Female Parole Agents in California Connie Ireland and Bruce Berg 22. Criers, Liars, and Manipulators: Probation Officers’ Views of Girls<br />

Emily Gaarder, Nancy Rodriguez and Marjorie S. Zatz 23. Construction of Meaning during Training for Probation and Parole John Crank 24. Sense-making in Prison: Inmate Identity as a<br />

Working Understanding John Riley 25. Accounts of Prison Work Stan Stojkovic 26. Denial of Parole: An Inmate Perspective Mary West-Smith, Mark Pogrebin and Eric D. Poole<br />

27. How Registered Sex Offenders View Registries Richard Tewksbury and Matthew B. Lees 28. Ambivalent Action: Prison Adaptation Strategies of First-Time, Short-Term Inmates<br />

Thomas Schmid and Richard S. Jones 29. Riding the Bus: Barriers to Prison Victimization and Family Management Strategies Johnna Christian 30. Keeping Families Together: The<br />

Importance of Maintaining Mother-Child Contact for Incarcerated Women Zoann K. Snyder<br />

December 2011: 254 x 178: 528pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-88748-9: $145.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-88749-6: $49.95<br />

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415887496<br />

INTRODUCTION TO CRIMINOLOGY TEXTBOOKS BACKLIST<br />

TITLE AUTHOR(S)/EDITOR(S) PUB DATE ISBN BINDING PRICE USD<br />

Crime Edited by John Muncie, Deborah Talbot and<br />

Reece Walters<br />

Criminal Justice Edited by Deborah Drake, John Muncie and<br />

Louise Westmarland<br />

2009 978-1-84392-516-3 Paperback $42.95<br />

978-1-84392-515-6 Hardback $125.00<br />

2009 978-1-84392-514-9 Paperback $41.95<br />

978-1-84392-513-2 Hardback $125.00<br />

Criminology and Criminal Justice Peter Joyce 2009 978-1-84392-336-7 Paperback $31.95<br />

978-1-84392-517-0 Hardback $125.00<br />

International Criminology Rob Watts, Judith Bessant and Richard Hil 2008 978-0-415-43179-8 Paperback $51.95<br />

978-0-415-43178-1 Hardback $155.00<br />

978-0-203-93430-2 e-Book<br />

Handbook of Restorative Justice Edited by Dennis Sullivan and Larry Tifft 2007 978-0-415-44724-9 Paperback $59.00<br />

978-0-415-35356-4 Hardback $230.00<br />

978-0-203-34682-2 e-Book<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website


GENERAL<br />

CRIMINOLOGY<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Evolution and Crime<br />

Jason Roach, Unviersity of Huddersfield, UK and<br />

Ken Pease, University of Loughborough, UK<br />

This fascinating new book opens up new ways of<br />

looking at different aspects of crime and crime control,<br />

exploring the potential contribution that a more<br />

welcoming approach to the evolutionary perspective<br />

would make to criminology.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Exorcising Ghosts: The Evolution of<br />

an Evolutionary Criminological Perspective 2. Chimpanzees,<br />

Bonobos and White Collar Crime 3. MAOA and the School<br />

of Hard Knocks 4. Evolution and Violent Crime 5. Staying<br />

Alive: The Story of Female Crime Victimisation 6. Sharing<br />

Goods and Tolerating Free Riders: What Early Communities<br />

can Tell us about Crime Control 7. The Brain, the Mind and<br />

Crime 8. Natural Born Winners? Evolution and the<br />

Psychopath 9. Beyond the Proximal: Evolution and<br />

Environmental Criminology 10. Suggestions for an Ethical<br />

Research and Policy Agenda. Bibliography. Index<br />

October 2012: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-392-3: $89.95<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-391-6: $35.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843923916<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Globalisation and the<br />

Challenge to Criminology<br />

Edited by Francis Pakes, University of Portsmouth,<br />

UK<br />

It is important that criminology continues to come to<br />

terms with globalization as a major orderer and<br />

disorderer of our social world and incorporate its various<br />

manifestations into its conceptual apparatus. This book<br />

aims to capture those debates.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Unpicking Globalisation and<br />

Criminology Francis Pakes 2. Whose Side are we on?:<br />

Globalization and Cosmopolitanism from Below Barbara<br />

Hudson 3. Globalisation and Comparative Criminology<br />

David Nelken 4. Crimmigration Law and the Globalization of<br />

Crime and Citizenship Juliet Stumpf 5. Criminology and<br />

Harm at the Global Frontier Leanne Weber and Sharon<br />

Pickering 6. Ethnic Minorities, Essentialism and the Dialectic<br />

of Coercion and Exclusion Francis Pakes 7. Global Diasporas<br />

and Crime Daniel Silverstone 8. Extremely Violent Societies:<br />

Globalisation, Mass Atrocities and Genocide Susanne<br />

Karstedt 9. Crimes of Globalization: A Criminological<br />

Analysis of International Financial Institutions<br />

David O. Friedrichs and Dawn Rothe 10. The Globalisation of<br />

Crime and the Glocalisation of Criminal Justice: The<br />

Challenge of Cybercrime in the 21st Century David Wall<br />

11. Policing International Terrorism Mathieu Deflem 12. The<br />

New Manifestations of International Policing Beth Greener<br />

13. Suspicious (In)Security: Biometrics, Mobility, and Global<br />

Criminalization Benjamin Muller<br />

December 2012: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-68607-5: $130.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415686075<br />

Researching Crime and Justice<br />

Tales from the Field<br />

Louise Westmarland, Open University, UK<br />

This book provides a practical<br />

introduction to crime and justice<br />

research, as well as presenting<br />

key research philosophies and<br />

discussing the potential<br />

problems and pitfalls of a wide<br />

range of research methods. As<br />

such, it is essential reading for<br />

criminology students and other<br />

researchers of crime and justice.<br />

Selected Contents: Introduction<br />

1. Problematising Criminological<br />

Research 2. Qualitative versus<br />

Quantitative Methods 3. Quantitative Methods<br />

4. Qualitative Methods 5. Soft and Semi-Structured Research<br />

6. Ethics, Emotions, Politics and Danger 7. Analysing<br />

Evidence of Crime and Justice<br />

April 2011: 234 x 156: 208pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-317-6: $120.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-316-9: $39.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843923169<br />

Today’s White Collar Crime<br />

Legal, Investigative, and Theoretical<br />

Perspectives<br />

Hank J. Brightman<br />

Series: Criminology and Justice Studies<br />

2009: 235 x 156: 448pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-99610-5: $144.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-99611-2: $65.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-88177-4<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415996112<br />

The only text available that<br />

presents white-collar crime to<br />

undergraduates from both<br />

theoretical and practical /<br />

professional perspectives, in a<br />

unique text-adapted readings<br />

format.<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

GENERAL CRIMINOLOGY<br />

White Collar Crime<br />

An Opportunity Perspective<br />

Michael Benson and Sally S. Simpson<br />

Series: Criminology and Justice Studies<br />

This book explains to students<br />

why white-collar crime is so<br />

prevalent and so difficult to<br />

control. Using this text,<br />

instructors can show students<br />

how these crimes are carried<br />

out in ways that make them<br />

difficult to discover. Instructors<br />

can also show how<br />

opportunities for white-collar<br />

crimes could be reduced if we<br />

were to approach the problem<br />

from the perspective of<br />

situational crime prevention. The authors address the<br />

difficulty of controlling white-collar crime in detail, and<br />

speculate on the future of white-collar crime in the<br />

rapidly globalizing world of trans-national corporations.<br />

2009: 229 x 152: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-95663-5: $135.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-95664-2: $41.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-88043-2<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415956642<br />

Criminal Justice Theory<br />

Explaining the Nature and Behavior of<br />

Criminal Justice<br />

Edited by David Duffee and Edward R. Maguire<br />

Series: Criminology and Justice Studies<br />

2007: 229 x 152: 400pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-95479-2: $145.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-95480-8: $49.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-94120-1<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415954808<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Criminal Justice Theory is the<br />

first comprehensive volume on<br />

the theoretical foundations of<br />

criminal justice. The authors<br />

argue that theory in criminal<br />

justice is currently<br />

underdeveloped and<br />

inconsistently applied, especially<br />

in comparison to the role of<br />

theory in the study of crime<br />

itself.<br />

Breaking the Wall of Silence<br />

Young People and Trafficking<br />

Jenny Pearce, University of Bedfordshire, UK,<br />

Patricia Hynes and Silvie Bovarnick, both at<br />

NSPCC, UK<br />

Series: Adolescence and Society Series<br />

July 2012: 216 x 138: 240pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-61751-2: $90.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-61754-3: $34.65<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415617543<br />

7


8<br />

NEW<br />

GENERAL CRIMINOLOGY<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Handbook of Critical<br />

Criminology<br />

Edited by Walter S. DeKeseredy and Molly<br />

Dragiewicz, both at University of Ontario, Canada<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> International Handbooks<br />

The <strong>Routledge</strong> Handbook of<br />

Critical Criminology is a<br />

collection of original essays<br />

specifically designed to offer an<br />

in-depth overview of the most<br />

up-to-date empirical,<br />

theoretical, and political<br />

contributions made by critical<br />

criminologists around the<br />

world. Special attention is<br />

devoted to new theoretical<br />

directions in the field, such as<br />

cultural criminology, masculinities studies, and feminist<br />

criminologies.<br />

Selected Contents: Introduction – Critical Criminology:<br />

Past, Present and Future Part 1: The History of Critical<br />

Criminology – International Perspectives 1. Finding a<br />

Political Voice: The Emergence of Critical Criminology in<br />

Britain Jayne Mooney 2. The History of Critical Criminology<br />

in the United States Raymond Michalowski 3. History of<br />

Critical Criminology in Australia Kerry Carrington and Russell<br />

Hogg 4. History of Critical Criminology in Canada Walter S.<br />

DeKeseredy 5. Latin American Critical Criminology Alfredo<br />

Schulte-Bockholt Part 2: Theoretical Perspectives<br />

6. Marxist Criminology Rick Matthews 7. Left Realism<br />

Walter S. DeKeseredy and Martin D. Schwartz 8. Critical<br />

Perspectives on Law Dragan Milovanovic 9. Feminist<br />

Perspectives in Criminology Claire M. Renzetti 10. Cultural<br />

Criminology: Burning up Capitalism, Consumer Culture and<br />

Crime Stephen Muzzatti 11. Postmodern Criminology<br />

Dragan Milovanovic 12. Convict Criminology Jeffrey Ross,<br />

Stephen Richards, Greg Newbold and Michael Lenza and<br />

Robert Grigsby 13. Masculinities James Messerschmidt and<br />

Stephen Tomsen 14. Peacemaking Criminology Hal Pepinsky<br />

15. ‘Since I Couldn’t Get out of my own Skin’: What would a<br />

Feminist Psychoanalytic Perspective of Crime and Justice look<br />

like? Robin A. Robinson 16. Critical Historical Perspectives<br />

on Crime Barry Godfrey Part 3: Select Topics in Critical<br />

Criminology 17. A Critical Interpretation of Animal<br />

Exploitation Bonnie Berry 18. Crimes of the Powerful:<br />

White-Collar Crime and Beyond David O. Friedrichs and<br />

Dawn L. Rothe 19. Girls’ Violence and Juvenile Justice: A<br />

Critical Examination Lisa Pasko and Meda Chesney-Lind<br />

20. Private Prisons, the Criminal Justice-Industrial Complex<br />

and Bodies Destined for Profitable Punishment Paul Leighton<br />

and Donna Selman 21. Anti-Feminist Backlash and Critical<br />

Criminology Molly Dragiewicz 22. Rural Crime and Critical<br />

Criminology Joseph F. Donnermeyer 23. Hate Crime Neil<br />

Chakraborti and Jon Garland 24. Gender and Policing:<br />

Critical Issues and Analyses Susan Miller and Emily Bonistall<br />

25. Critical Issues in Intimate Partner Violence Shana Maier<br />

and Raquel Bergen 26. Human Trafficking Emily Troshynski<br />

27. War on Terror, Human Rights & Critical Criminology<br />

Michael Welch 28. Media and Crime Gregg Barak 29. The<br />

Contemporary Youth Gang: Critical Perspectives Julian<br />

Tanner 30. Adult Women in Conflict with the Law Merry<br />

Morash and Julie Yingling 31. Children and Human Rights<br />

Patrik Olsson 32. Drugs and Critical Criminology Judith<br />

Grant Part 4: Policies 33. Curbing State Crime by<br />

Challenging Empire Ronald C. Kramer 34. Confronting<br />

Campus Sexual Assault Molly Dragiewicz and Walter S.<br />

DeKeseredy 35. Violence and Social Policy Elliott Currie<br />

36. The International Criminal Court: The Solution to Ending<br />

Impunity Dawn Rothe and Christopher Mullins 37. Prisons:<br />

Securing the State Mary Bosworth and Sophie Palmer<br />

38. Confronting State Oppression: The Role of Music David<br />

Kauzlarich and Clay Michael Awsumb<br />

October 2011: 246 x 174: 552pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-77967-8: $215.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415779678<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Handbook of<br />

Deviant Behavior<br />

Edited by Clifton D. Bryant, Virginia Tech University,<br />

USA<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> International Handbooks<br />

The Handbook of Deviant<br />

Behavior presents a<br />

comprehensive, integrative, and<br />

accessible overview of the<br />

contemporary body of<br />

knowledge in the field of social<br />

deviance in the twenty-first<br />

century.<br />

This book addresses the full<br />

range of scholarly concerns<br />

within this area – including<br />

theoretical, methodological,<br />

and substantive issues – in over seventy original entries,<br />

written by an international mix of recognized scholars.<br />

Each of these essays provides insight not only into the<br />

historical and sociological evolution of the topic<br />

addressed, but also highlights associated notable<br />

thinkers, research findings, and key published works for<br />

further reference. As a whole, this Handbook undertakes<br />

an in depth evaluation of the contemporary state of<br />

knowledge within the area of social deviance, and<br />

beyond this considers future directions and concerns<br />

that will engage scholars in the decades ahead.<br />

The inclusion of comparative and cross-cultural examples<br />

and discussions, relevant case studies and other<br />

pedagogical features make this book an invaluable<br />

learning tool for undergraduate and post graduate<br />

students in disciplines such as criminology, mental health<br />

studies, criminal theory, and contemporary sociology.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: Conceptualizing Deviance<br />

Part 2: Research Methodology in Studying Deviance<br />

Part 3: Theories of Deviance Part 4: Becoming Deviant as a<br />

Person Part 5: Deviant Lifestyles and Subcultures<br />

Part 6: Continuous Deviance Part 7: Self-destructive Behavior<br />

as Deviance Part 8: Deviance in Social Institutions<br />

Part 9: Sexual Deviance Part 10: Crimes of the Times<br />

Part 11: Crime: Traditional Non-violent Modes<br />

Part 12: Crime: Traditional Violent Modes<br />

Part 13: Handicap, Disability, and Impairment Deviance<br />

Part 14: Exiting Deviance Part 15: New Horizons in Deviance<br />

June 2011: 246 x 174: 648pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-48274-5: $220.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415482745<br />

Security<br />

Lucia Zedner<br />

Series: Key Ideas in Criminology<br />

2009: 198 x 129: 216pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-39175-7: $130.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-39176-4: $43.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415391764<br />

Today security is a central theme<br />

in criminology; as security<br />

governs our lives, governing<br />

security becomes a priority. This<br />

important text provides an<br />

authoritative introduction to<br />

security, serving simultaneously<br />

as an introduction and as a<br />

timely reflection upon the<br />

significance, implications, and<br />

dangers of ‘security’.<br />

Handbook of Human Rights<br />

Edited by Thomas Cushman, Wellesley College,<br />

USA<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> International Handbooks<br />

The Handbook maps out the<br />

field of human rights for the<br />

humanities and social sciences.<br />

It provides a solid foundation<br />

for the reader who wants to<br />

learn the basic parameters of<br />

the field, but also to promote<br />

new thinking and frameworks<br />

for the future study of human<br />

rights in the twenty-first<br />

century.<br />

Selected Contents:<br />

Part 1: Foundations and Critiques Part 2: New Frameworks<br />

for Understanding Human Rights Part 3: World Religious<br />

Traditions and Human Rights Part 4: Social, Economic,<br />

Group, and Collective Rights Part 5: Critical Perspectives on<br />

Human Rights Organizations, Institutions, and Practices<br />

Part 6: Law and Human Rights Part 7: Narrative and<br />

Aesthetic Dimension of Rights Part 8: Geographies of Rights<br />

September 2011: 246 x 174: 768pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-48023-9: $195.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415480239<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Handbook of<br />

International Criminology<br />

Edited by Cindy J. Smith, University of Baltimore,<br />

USA, Sheldon X. Zhang, San Diego State University,<br />

USA and Rosemary Barberet, John Jay College of<br />

Criminal Justice, USA<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> International Handbooks<br />

This Handbook showcases the<br />

latest thinking and findings<br />

from a group of senior and<br />

promising young scholars<br />

around the world who have<br />

come together in an effort to<br />

broaden our perspectives in<br />

understanding crime and social<br />

control across borders and<br />

nationalities. It is divided into<br />

three parts, in which three<br />

distinct but overlapping types of<br />

crime are presented and discussed: international crime,<br />

transnational crime, and national crime.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: Methods and Theories Part 2:<br />

Special Topics Part 3: Criminology and Criminal Justice in<br />

Context<br />

April 2011: 246 x 174: 584pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-77909-8: $220.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415779098<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Criminal and Crime Reduction<br />

The Role of Group Processes<br />

Edited by Jane L. Wood and Theresa A. Gannon<br />

September 2012: 234 x 156: 240pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84872-083-1: $52.47<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781848720831<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website


Contemporary Critical<br />

Criminology<br />

Walter S. DeKeseredy, University of Ontario,<br />

Canada<br />

Series: Key Ideas in Criminology<br />

Written by an internationally<br />

renowned scholar,<br />

Contemporary Critical<br />

Criminology introduces the most<br />

up-to-date empirical, theoretical,<br />

and political contributions made<br />

by critical criminologists around<br />

the world. In its exploration of<br />

this material, the book also<br />

challenges the erroneous but<br />

widely held notion that the<br />

critical criminological project is<br />

restricted to mechanically<br />

applying theories to substantive topics, or to simple<br />

calling for radical political, economic, cultural, and social<br />

transformations.<br />

2010: 198 x 129: 144pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-55667-5: $135.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-55666-8: $41.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415556668<br />

2nd Edition<br />

Criminology: The Basics<br />

Sandra Walklate, University of Liverpool, UK<br />

Series: The Basics<br />

As crime continues to be a high<br />

profile issue troubling politicians,<br />

the public and the media alike,<br />

the study of criminology has<br />

boomed. Providing an<br />

international and comparative<br />

introduction to the discipline,<br />

Criminology: The Basics is an<br />

accessible guide to the<br />

theoretical and practical<br />

approaches to the phenomena<br />

of crime. Topics covered in this<br />

new edition include:<br />

• challenging myths about crime and offenders<br />

• the search for criminological explanation<br />

• thinking about the victim of crime<br />

• introduction to critical criminology<br />

• crime prevention and the future of crime control<br />

• looking to the future, cultural criminology and<br />

terrorism.<br />

Easy to read, concise and supported by a glossary of<br />

terms and pointers to further reading, Criminology: The<br />

Basics is a perfect introduction to this important and<br />

popular subject.<br />

Selected Contents: List of Figures and Tables.<br />

Acknowledgements. Preface 1. What is Criminology? 2.<br />

Counting Crime 3. How Much Crime? Challenging Myths<br />

about Crime and Offenders 4. The Search for Criminological<br />

Explanation 5. Thinking about the Victim of Crime 6.<br />

Crimes of the Suites: An Introduction To Critical Criminology<br />

7. A Question of Justice 8. Crime Prevention and the Future<br />

of Crime Control 9. Developing your Criminological<br />

Imagination. Glossary of Terms. Appendix. Bibliography<br />

June 2011: 198 x 129: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-57553-9: $90.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-57554-6: $19.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415575546<br />

NEW<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Handbook of<br />

Surveillance Studies<br />

Edited by David Lyon, Queens University, Ontario,<br />

Canada, Kevin Haggerty, University of Alberta,<br />

Canada and Kirstie Ball, Open University Business<br />

School, UK<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> International Handbooks<br />

Through international<br />

comparisons and up-to-date,<br />

expert analysis this handbook<br />

shows how and why<br />

surveillance operates today,<br />

touching everyday life with<br />

unprecedented consequences<br />

– both good and bad.<br />

Selected Contents: Preface:<br />

‘Your Paper’s Please’: Personal and<br />

Professional Encounters with<br />

Surveillance. Introduction:<br />

Introducing Surveillance Studies Part 1: Understanding<br />

Surveillance Part 1 Introduction 1.1. Theory 1: After<br />

Foucault 1.1.a. Panopticon – Discipline – Control<br />

1.1.b. Simulation and Post-Panopticism 1.1.c. Surveillance<br />

As Biopower 1.2. Theory 2: Difference, Politics, Privacy<br />

1.2.a. ‘You Shouldn’t Wear That Body’ – The Problematic of<br />

Surveillance and Gender 1.2.b. The Information State: A<br />

Historical Perspective on Surveillance 1.2.c. Needs For<br />

Surveillance and the Movement to Protect Privacy<br />

1.2.d. Race and Surveillance 1.3. Cultures of Surveillance<br />

1.3.a. Performing Surveillance 1.3.b. Ubiquitous Surveillance<br />

1.3.c. Surveillance in Literature, Film and Television<br />

1.3.d. Surveillance Work(ers) Part 2: Surveillance as<br />

Sorting Part 2 Introduction 2.1. Surveillance Techniques<br />

2.1.a. Statistical Surveillance: Remote Sensing in the Digital<br />

Age 2.1.b. Advertising’s New Surveillance Ecosystem<br />

2.1.c. New Technologies, Security and Surveillance<br />

2.2. Social Divisions of Surveillance 2.2.a. Colonialism<br />

and Surveillance 2.2.b. Identity, Surveillance and Modernity:<br />

Sorting Out Who’s Who 2.2.c. The Surveillance-Industrial<br />

Complex 2.2.d. The Body as Data in the Age of Information<br />

Part 3: Surveillance Contexts Part 3 Introduction<br />

3.1. Population Control 3.1.a. Borders, Identification, and<br />

Surveillance: New Regimes of Border Control 3.1.b. Urban<br />

Spaces of Surveillance 3.1.c. Seeing Population: Census and<br />

Surveillance By Numbers 3.1.d. Surveillance and<br />

Non-Humans 3.1.e. The Rise of the Surveillance School<br />

3.2. Crime and Policing 3.2.a. Surveillance, Crime and the<br />

Police 3.2.b. Crime, Surveillance and the Media 3.2.c. The<br />

Success of Failure: Accounting For the Global Growth of<br />

CCTV 3.2.d. Surveillance and Urban Violence In Latin<br />

America: Mega Cities, Social Division, Security and<br />

Surveillance 3.3. Security, Intelligence, War 3.3.a. Military<br />

Surveillance 3.3.b. Security, Surveillance and Democracy<br />

3.3.c. Surveillance and Terrorism 3.3.d. The Globalization of<br />

Homeland Security 3.4. Production, Consumption,<br />

Administration 3.4.a. Organization, Employees and<br />

Surveillance 3.4.b. Public Administration as Surveillance<br />

3.4.c. Consumer Surveillance: Context, Perspectives and<br />

Concerns in the Personal Information Economy 3.5. Digital<br />

Spaces of Surveillance 3.5.a. Globalization and<br />

Surveillance 3.5.b. Surveillance and Participation on the Web<br />

2.0 3.5.c. Hide and Seek: Surveillance of Young People on<br />

the Internet Part 4: Limiting Surveillance Part IV<br />

Introduction 4.1. Ethics, Law and Policy 4.1.a. A<br />

Surveillance of Care – Evaluating Surveillance Ethically<br />

4.1.b. Regulating Surveillance: The Importance of Principles<br />

4.1.c. Privacy, Identity and Anonymity 4.2. Regulation and<br />

Resistance 4.2.a. Regulating Surveillance Technologies:<br />

Institutional Arrangements 4.2.b. Everyday Resistance<br />

4.2.c. Privacy Advocates, Privacy Advocacy and the<br />

Surveillance Society 4.2.d. The Politics of Surveillance: Civil<br />

Liberties, Human Rights and Ethics<br />

March 2012: 246 x 174: 460pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-58883-6: $195.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415588836<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

GENERAL CRIMINOLOGY<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> International<br />

Handbook of Green<br />

Criminology<br />

Edited by Nigel South, University of Essex, UK and<br />

Avi Brisman, CUNY Baruch College, USA<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> International Handbooks<br />

Reflecting the growing academic interest in<br />

environmental crimes, harms, and threats, as well as in<br />

environmental legislation and regulation, this Handbook<br />

will offer the most in-depth and comprehensive volume<br />

to date. With contributions from leading international<br />

green criminologists and scholars in related fields, The<br />

International Handbook of Green Criminology will<br />

examine a wide range of substantive issues, including air<br />

pollution, animal rights, climate change, corporate<br />

criminality and impacts on the environment (including<br />

humans and wildlife), environmental justice, water<br />

pollution, and wildlife trafficking, among others. In<br />

addition to offering chapters on the history and<br />

development of green criminology, as well as<br />

methodological concerns for this area of academic<br />

interest, The International Handbook of Green<br />

Criminology will demonstrate green criminology’s<br />

theoretical breadth with chapters discussing or drawing<br />

upon conservation criminology, ecoglobal criminology,<br />

feminist criminology, and green cultural criminology.<br />

With examples of environmental crimes, harms, and<br />

threats from Australia, Canada, Eastern Europe, South<br />

America, and the United Kingdom, The International<br />

Handbook of Green Criminology will serve as a vital<br />

resource for scholars and students in criminology,<br />

sociology, law and socio-legal studies, as well as related<br />

but broader areas, such as environmental science,<br />

politics and international relations.<br />

July 2012: 246 x 174: 496pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67882-7: $199.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415678827<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Understanding Hate Crimes<br />

Acts, Motives, Offenders, Victims, and<br />

Justice<br />

Carolyn Turpin-Petrosino, Bridgewater State<br />

College, USA<br />

This comprehensive textbook serves as a stand-alone<br />

source for instructors and students who study courses in<br />

hate crimes and/or other related courses. This text<br />

explores criminal justice policy as it relates to hate crimes<br />

by presenting a thorough and complete presentation of<br />

the subject in context.<br />

A comprehensive single source, as an efficient and useful<br />

option for both instructors and students, also assesses<br />

hate crimes policy.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: Introduction Part 2: A History of<br />

Hate in America Part 3: Hate Crime Laws and the<br />

Constitution Part 4: The Criminology of Hate Crimes Part 5:<br />

Offenders – Who Are They? Part 6: Victims – Who Are They?<br />

Part 7: Hate Crime Research – What Have We Learned? Part<br />

8: Criminal Justice Responses Part 9: International<br />

Perspectives Part 10: A Look to the Future<br />

December 2012: 234 x 156: 250pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-48400-8: $150.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-48401-5: $45.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415484015<br />

9


10<br />

GENERAL CRIMINOLOGY<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2013<br />

The <strong>Routledge</strong> Handbook of<br />

European Criminology<br />

Edited by Sophie Body-Gendrot, Sorbonne-Paris IV,<br />

France, Renè Lèvy, CESDIP, France, Mike Hough,<br />

Institute for Criminal Policy Research, Birkbeck<br />

College, UK Sonja Snacken, Brussels Free University,<br />

Belgium and Klara Kerezsi, ELTE University, Hungary<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> International Handbooks<br />

This new book speaks to the<br />

need for a truly comparative<br />

and interdisciplinary companion<br />

to the state of the art of<br />

European criminology reflecting<br />

on where it is and what the<br />

institutional variations in legal<br />

definitions and responses<br />

reveal.<br />

Select Contents:<br />

Part 1: European Issues on<br />

Crime and Crime Control,<br />

1. Difficulties and Complexities of Comparisons; Differences<br />

within Europe 2. History of Crime and Criminal Justice in<br />

Europe 3. Is There A European Criminology? Differences in<br />

the Institutionalisation of Deviance, Crime and Justice<br />

Research 4. Is There A European Crime Control Policy?<br />

5. Criminal Justice and Human Rights Part 2: Variations In<br />

Crime (Description; Explanations) 5. Shifting Definitions<br />

of Crime 6. Explaining Crime Trends and Importance of<br />

Economic Cycles 7. State Crime 8. Organizational Crime<br />

9. Ethnicity and Crime in Eastern and Western Europe<br />

10. Gender and Crime 11. Informal Economy 12. Place,<br />

Space and Urban (Un)Safety Part 3: Variations in<br />

(Institutional) Responses and Possible Explanations<br />

13. Political Economy, Welfare States, Penal Systems<br />

14. Punitivity; Public Opinion 15. Risk, Uncertainty,<br />

Surveillance 16. National and Local Prevention Policies<br />

17. The Governance of Criminal Justice, Legitimacy and Trust<br />

18. Policing (Organisation, Policy) 19. Juvenile Justice<br />

Systems 20. Sentencing, Punishment, Prisons<br />

21. Community Sanctions 22. The Role of Victims<br />

23. Immigration and Border Control 24. Media, 25. Drug<br />

Policies 26. Responses to Terrorist Threats 27. Green Crime<br />

(Responses to Environmental Crime). Conclusion 1: Internal<br />

Diversity and Pan-European Unity. Conclusion<br />

2: Observations from an Outsider<br />

January 2013: 234 x 156: 528pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-68584-9: $190.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415685849<br />

GENERAL CRIMINOLOGY BACKLIST<br />

NEW<br />

Indigenous People, Crime and<br />

Punishment<br />

Thalia Anthony, University of Sydney, Australia<br />

Indigenous People, Crime and Punishment examines<br />

criminal sentencing courts’ changing characterisations of<br />

Indigenous peoples’ identity, culture and postcolonial<br />

status. Focusing largely on Australian Indigenous<br />

peoples, but referring also to the Canadian and New<br />

Zealand experiences, Thalia Anthony critically analyzes<br />

how the judiciary have interpreted Indigenous difference.<br />

Through an analysis of Indigenous sentencing decisions<br />

and remarks over a fifty year period in a number of<br />

jurisdictions, the book demonstrates how discretion is<br />

moulded to cultural assumptions about Indigeneity.<br />

More specifically, Indigenous People, Crime and<br />

Punishment shows how the increasing demonization of<br />

Indigenous criminality and culture in sentencing has<br />

turned earlier ‘gains’ in the legal recognition of<br />

Indigenous peoples on their head. The recognition of<br />

Indigenous difference is thereby revealed as a pliable<br />

concept that is just as likely to remove rights as it is to<br />

grant them.<br />

Selected Contents: Introduction: Re-Imagining the<br />

Indigenous Criminal 1. Control Metaphors in Indigenous<br />

Sentencing 2. Colonial and Postcolonial Indigenous<br />

Punishment 3. Sentencing away Culture and Customary<br />

Marriage 4. Traditional Punishment in the New Punitiveness<br />

5. Sentencing ‘Disadvantaged Alcoholics’ 6. Sentencing<br />

Indigenous Resisters as if the Racism never Occurred.<br />

Conclusion/Epilogue: Burgeoning Control Metaphors in<br />

Sentencing<br />

March 2012: 234 x 156: 204pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-66844-6: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415668446<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Financial Crimes<br />

A Global Threat<br />

Edited by Maximillian Edelbacher, AVUS Group,<br />

Vienna, Austria, Peter C. Kratcoski, Kent State<br />

University, USA and Michael Theil, University of<br />

Economics and Business Administration, Austria<br />

Series: Advances in Police Theory and Practice<br />

Providing information from United Nations presentations<br />

and experts in the field of international security, this<br />

volume describes the influence that organized crime,<br />

white collar crime, and corruption have on the world<br />

financial systems, examining what can be done to<br />

prevent the collapse of these financial systems and how<br />

to prevent future crises.<br />

June 2012: 235 x 156: 488pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-4398-6922-2: $129.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781439869222<br />

TITLE AUTHOR(S)/EDITOR(S) PUB DATE ISBN BINDING PRICE USD<br />

Theories of Crime Edited by Ian Marsh 2006 978-0-415-37069-1 Paperback $53.95<br />

Handbook of<br />

Restorative Justice<br />

Edited by Dennis Sullivan<br />

and Larry Tifft<br />

978-0-415-37068-4 Hardback $185.00<br />

978-0-203-03051-6 e-Book<br />

2005 978-0-415-35356-4 Hardback $230.00<br />

978-0-415-44724-9 Paperback $59.00<br />

978-1-84392-619-1 e-Book<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

New Directions in<br />

Criminological Theory<br />

Edited by Steve Hall, University of Teesside and<br />

Simon Winlow, University of York, UK<br />

This edited collection brings together established global<br />

scholars and new thinkers to outline fresh concepts and<br />

theoretical perspectives for criminological research and<br />

analysis in the twenty-first century. Criminologists from<br />

the UK, USA, Canada and Australia evaluate the current<br />

condition of criminological theory and present students<br />

and researchers with new and revised ideas from the<br />

realms of politics, culture and subjectivity to unpack<br />

crime and violence in the precarious age of global<br />

neoliberalism.<br />

Selected Contents: Introduction: The Need for ‘New<br />

Directions’ in Criminological Theory Steve Hall and Simon<br />

Winlow Part 1: Epistemological and Political Reflections<br />

1. Criminological Knowledge: Doing Critique; Doing Politics<br />

Pat Carlen 2. Political Economy and Criminology: The Return<br />

of the Repressed Robert Reiner 3. Critical Criminology,<br />

Critical Theory and Social Harm Majid Yar 4. The Current<br />

Condition of Criminological Theory in North America Walter<br />

DeKeseredy Part 2: Criminological Theory, Culture and<br />

the Subject 5. The Biological and the Social in<br />

Criminological Theory Tim Owen 6. From Social Order to the<br />

Personal Subject: A Major Reversal Michel Wieviorka 7. The<br />

Discourse on ‘Race’ in Criminological Theory Colin Webster<br />

8. Using Cultural Geography to Think Differently about Space<br />

and Crime Keith Hayward 9. Consumer Culture and the<br />

Meaning of the Urban Riots in England Steve Hall 10.<br />

Censure, Culture and Political Economy: Beyond the Death of<br />

Deviance Debate Colin Sumner Part 3: Criminological<br />

Theory and Violence 11. Psychosocial Perspectives: Men,<br />

Madness and Violence D.W. Jones 12. All that is Sacred is<br />

Profaned: Towards a Theory of Subjective Violence Simon<br />

Winlow 13. Late Capitalism, Vulnerable Populations and<br />

Violent Predatory Crime David Wilson Part 4: Crime and<br />

Criminological Theory in the Global Age 14. Outline of a<br />

Criminology of Drift Jeff Ferrell 15. It Was Never About the<br />

Money: Market Society, Organized Crime and UK<br />

Criminology Dick Hobbs 16. After the Crisis: New Directions<br />

in Theorising Corporate and White-Collar Crime Kate Burdis<br />

and Steve Tombs 17. Crimes against Reality: Parapolitics,<br />

Simulation, Power Crime Eric Wilson 18. Global Terrorism,<br />

Risk and the State Sandra Walklate and Gabe Mythen<br />

June 2012: 234x156: 388pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-914-7: $155.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-913-0: $48.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843929130<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website<br />

RELATED JOURNALS<br />

Global Crime<br />

Editor: Carlo Morselli - University of<br />

Montreal<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/fglc<br />

Justice Quarterly<br />

Editor: Cassia C. Spohn - Arizona State<br />

University<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/rjqy<br />

Journal of Criminal Justice<br />

Education<br />

Editor: George Higgins - University of<br />

Louisville, USA<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/rcje<br />

International Journal of<br />

Applied Criminal Justice<br />

Editor: Mahesh K. Nalla - School of<br />

Criminal Justice at Michigan State<br />

University, USA<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/rcac


METHODS AND<br />

DATA<br />

NEW<br />

Applied Statistics for the Social<br />

and Health Sciences<br />

Rachel A. Gordon, University of Illinois, USA<br />

This book is for use in a two-semester graduate course<br />

sequence covering basic univariate and bivariate statistics<br />

and regression models for nominal and ordinal<br />

outcomes, as well as ordinary least squares regression.<br />

Key features of the book include:<br />

• interweaving the teaching of statistical concepts with<br />

examples developed for the course from publiclyavailable<br />

social science data or drawn from the<br />

literature<br />

• thorough integration of teaching statistical theory<br />

with teaching data processing and analysis<br />

• teaching of both SAS and Stata “side-by-side” and use<br />

of chapter exercises in which students practice<br />

programming and interpretation on the same data set<br />

and course exercises in which students can choose<br />

their own research questions and data set.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: Getting Started Part 2: Basic<br />

Descriptive and Inferential Statistics Part 3: Ordinary Least<br />

Squares Regression Part 4: The Generalized Linear Model<br />

Part 5: Wrapping Up<br />

February 2012: 254 x 203: 992pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-87536-3: $149.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-13529-7<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415875363<br />

Visual Research Methods in the<br />

Social Sciences<br />

Awakening Visions<br />

Stephen Spencer, Sheffield Hallam University, UK<br />

2010: 234 x 156: 296pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-48382-7: $135.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-48385-8: $47.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415483858<br />

Demonstrating the use of visual<br />

ethnography, video and<br />

photography, ‘researcher found’<br />

imagery and representations in<br />

popular culture, this book offers<br />

an integrated approach to<br />

doing visual research.<br />

Regression Analysis for the<br />

Social Sciences<br />

Rachel A. Gordon, University of Illinois, USA<br />

Regression Analysis for the<br />

Social Sciences addresses the<br />

wide range of mathematical<br />

skills and methodological<br />

interests of students in the<br />

social sciences, engaging<br />

students who are apprehensive<br />

without short-changing those<br />

eager to learn statistics.<br />

• interweaving the teaching of<br />

statistical concepts with<br />

examples developed for the course from publiclyavailable<br />

social science data or drawn from the literature<br />

• thorough integration of teaching statistical theory with<br />

teaching data processing and analysis<br />

• teaching of both SAS and Stata “side-by-side” and use<br />

of chapter exercises in which students practice<br />

programming and interpretation on the same data set<br />

and course exercises in which students can choose<br />

their own research questions and data set.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Examples of Social Science Research<br />

Using Regression Analysis 2. Planning a Quantitative<br />

Research Project With Existing Data 3. Basic Features of<br />

Statistical Packages and Data Documentation 4. Basics of<br />

Writing Batch Programs with Statistical Packages 5. Basic<br />

Concepts of Bivariate Regression 6. Basic Concepts of<br />

Multiple Regression 7. Dummy Variables 8. Interactions<br />

9. Nonlinear Relationships 10. Indirect Effects and Omitted<br />

Variable Bias 11. Outliers, Heteroskedasticity, and<br />

Multicollinearity 12. Putting It All Together and Thinking<br />

About Where to Go Next<br />

2010: 235 x 187: 632pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-99154-4: $135.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-11809-2<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415991544<br />

GIS and Spatial Analysis for the<br />

Social Sciences<br />

Coding, Mapping, and Modeling<br />

Robert Nash Parker and Emily K. Asencio<br />

Series: Contemporary Sociological Perspectives<br />

2008: 279 x 216: 272pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-98961-9: $160.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-98962-6: $79.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-92934-6<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415989626<br />

This is the first book to provide<br />

sociologists, criminologists,<br />

political scientists, and other<br />

social scientists with the<br />

methodological logic and<br />

techniques for doing spatial<br />

analysis in their chosen fields of<br />

inquiry.<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

METHODS AND DATA<br />

Sociologists Backstage<br />

Answers to 10 Questions About What They<br />

Do<br />

Sarah Fenstermaker and Nikki Jones, both at<br />

University of California, Santa Barbara, USA<br />

Series: Contemporary Sociological Perspectives<br />

Published social science rarely<br />

gives real attention to the actual<br />

doing of research, making the<br />

process appear magical, or at<br />

least self-evident and simple.<br />

This book is intended to right<br />

the balance by illuminating the<br />

craft and the choices made as<br />

the research process unfolds for<br />

the sociologist. The<br />

metaphorical image of going<br />

‘backstage’ speaks to the<br />

reader’s experience with each of<br />

the seventeen interviews, which illuminate the choices<br />

and constraints of researchers as well as unanticipated<br />

developments, good and bad. The volume represents a<br />

range of interests, themes, research philosophies and<br />

approaches from a diverse group of contributors.<br />

Particularly suited for advanced undergraduate and<br />

graduate research methods students, the volume<br />

addresses virtually all of the most vexing methods<br />

questions through accessible and compelling first-hand<br />

descriptions of sociological research. The volume is an<br />

invaluable addition to the library of all social science<br />

researchers.<br />

2010: 235 x 156: 272pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-80658-9: $149.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-87093-1: $35.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-84036-8<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415870931<br />

Social Statistics<br />

The Basics and Beyond<br />

Thomas J. Linneman, The College of William and<br />

Mary, USA<br />

Series: Contemporary Sociological Perspectives<br />

With just the right level of<br />

detail, and a graphically<br />

innovative approach, this book<br />

carefully guides students<br />

through the statistical<br />

techniques they will encounter<br />

in the real world. The basics are<br />

covered in a non-intimidating<br />

way for your students, plus<br />

multiple regression, interaction<br />

effects, logistic regression,<br />

non-linear effects. The book uses three datasets<br />

throughout: General Social Survey, American National<br />

Election Studies, World Values Survey, and includes SPSS<br />

demonstrations at the end of each chapter.<br />

2010: 235 x 187: 576pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-80501-8: $95.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-84167-9<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415805018<br />

11


12<br />

METHODS AND DATA<br />

Contemporary Critical Theory<br />

and Methodology<br />

Piet Strydom, University College Cork, Ireland<br />

Series: Social Research Today<br />

In this book, Piet Strydom presents a groundbreaking<br />

treatment of critical theory’s methodology, using as a<br />

base the reconstruction of the left-Hegelian tradition,<br />

the relation between critical theory and pragmatism, and<br />

the associated metatheoretical implications. He assesses<br />

extant positions, presents a detailed yet comprehensive<br />

restatement and development of critical theory’s<br />

methodology, compares it with a wide range of current<br />

concepts of social criticism and critique, and analyzes<br />

leading critical theorists’ exemplary applications of it.<br />

Besides immanent transcendence and the sign-mediated<br />

epistemology common to the left-Hegelian tradition,<br />

special attention is given to the abductive imagination,<br />

reconstruction, normative and causal explanation,<br />

explanatory mechanisms and the communicative<br />

framework which enables critical theory to link up with<br />

its addressees and the public.<br />

Contemporary Critical Theory and Methodology is<br />

recommended reading for senior undergraduate and<br />

postgraduate students, as well as professionals working<br />

within disciplines such as sociology, philosophy, political<br />

science, critical theory and cultural studies.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: Metatheoretical foundations<br />

1. Classical Foundations 2. Appropriation of the Classical<br />

Foundations 3. Contemporary Critical Theory and<br />

Pragmatism 4. Immanent Transcendence as Key Concept<br />

Part 2: Methodology 5. Contemporary Critical Theorists on<br />

Methodology 6. The Methodological Framework of Critical<br />

Theory 7. Varieties of Critique: Critical Theory Compared 8.<br />

Methodology in Action<br />

February 2011: 234 x 156: 272pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-54827-4: $138.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415548274<br />

A Guide to Surviving a Career<br />

in Academia<br />

Navigating the Rites of Passage<br />

Edited by Emily Lenning, Fayetteville State<br />

University, USA, Sara Brightman and Susan<br />

Caringella, both at Western Michigan University,<br />

USA<br />

2010: 234 x 156: 160pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-78021-6: $144.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-78022-3: $43.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415780223<br />

Navigating an academic career<br />

is a complex process – to be<br />

successful requires mastering<br />

several ‘rites of passage.’ This<br />

comprehensive guide takes<br />

academics at all stages of their<br />

career through a journey,<br />

beginning at graduate school<br />

and ending with retirement.<br />

RACE, CLASS,<br />

GENDER AND<br />

CRIME<br />

NEW<br />

Sex, Crime and Morality<br />

Sharon Hayes, Belinda Carpenter and Angela<br />

Dwyer, all at Queensland University of Technology,<br />

Australia<br />

Within modern democratic<br />

nations, there are a specific<br />

group of offences which bear<br />

the brunt of the label ‘crimes<br />

against morality’. These include<br />

offences related to prostitution<br />

and pornography,<br />

homosexuality, incest, and child<br />

sexual abuse. This book<br />

examines the historical,<br />

anthropological and moral<br />

reasons for such differentiations<br />

in contemporary western<br />

culture.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction Part 1 2. Out of Time:<br />

The Moral Temporality of Sex and Taboo 3. Incest<br />

4. Pornography Part 2 5. Out of Place: The Moral<br />

Geography of Sex and Deviance 6. Sex Offending<br />

7. Sexuality Part 3 8. Out of Context: The Moral Economy<br />

of Sex and Harm 9. Sexual Commerce 10. Sex Trafficking<br />

11. Conclusion<br />

December 2011: 234 x 156: 152pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-816-4: $145.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-815-7: $44.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843928157<br />

Social Class and Crime<br />

A Biosocial Approach<br />

Anthony Walsh, Boise State University, USA<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> Advances in Criminology<br />

This book takes a look at the class-crime relationship<br />

written from a biosocial perspective, a perspective that<br />

views nature and nurture as the heads and tails our<br />

development and of our existence. Using concepts and<br />

data from genetics, neurobiology, and evolutionary<br />

biology, it explores the closely-linked risk factors<br />

common both to failing to achieve occupational success<br />

and to criminal behavior.<br />

2010: 229 x 152: 184pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-88347-4: $125.00<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-84424-3<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415883474<br />

Women and Heroin Addiction<br />

in China’s Changing Society<br />

Huan Gao, California State University, Stanislaus,<br />

USA<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> Advances in Criminology<br />

This groundbreaking book provides scholars and<br />

students in the areas of criminology, criminal justice,<br />

sociology, substance abuse and women’s studies with<br />

in-depth analysis of 131 female heroin users’ drug use<br />

careers in China. The book has important policy<br />

implications for both China and the international society<br />

in the context of increasing global concern about<br />

women’s substance abuse.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Social Changes and Illicit Drug Use in<br />

China 2. Reaching Out to Women Subjects 3. Family, School<br />

and Post-School Life 4. Initiation into Heroin 5. Continued<br />

Use and Crime 6. Desistance 7. Conclusions and Policy<br />

Implications. Epilogue<br />

July 2011: 229 x 152: 226pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-89318-3: $125.00<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-80733-0<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415893183<br />

Changing Times for Black<br />

Professionals<br />

Adia Harvey Wingfield, Georgia State University,<br />

USA<br />

This book is a study of the<br />

challenges, issues, and obstacles<br />

facing black professional<br />

workers in the United States.<br />

Though they have always been<br />

a part of the U.S. labor force,<br />

black professionals have often<br />

been overlooked in media,<br />

research, and public opinion.<br />

Ironically, however, their<br />

experiences offer a particularly<br />

effective way to understand<br />

how race shapes social life, opportunities, and upward<br />

mobility.<br />

2010: 254 x 178: 52pp<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-89199-8: $9.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-83423-7<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415891998<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website


2nd Edition<br />

Criminological Perspectives on<br />

Race and Crime<br />

Shaun L. Gabbidon, Pennsylvania State Capital<br />

College, USA<br />

Series: Criminology and Justice Studies<br />

2010: 229 x 152: 296pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-87421-2: $149.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-87424-3: $41.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-85791-5<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415874243<br />

Ideal for use in either crime<br />

theory or race and crime<br />

courses, this is the only text to<br />

look at the array of explanations<br />

for crime as they relate to racial<br />

and ethnic groups and to<br />

provide insight on their<br />

reliability and validity to account<br />

for criminal behavior.<br />

2nd Edition<br />

Sex For Sale<br />

Prostitution, Pornography, and the Sex<br />

Industry<br />

Edited by Ronald Weitzer<br />

2009: 229 x 152: 384pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-99604-4: $139.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-99605-1: $39.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-87280-2<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415996051<br />

This book develops a new<br />

sub-field on violence in<br />

vulnerable populations, with<br />

attendant approaches to theory<br />

and methods.<br />

Beyond Bad Girls<br />

Gender, Violence and Hype<br />

Meda Chesney-Lind and Katherine Irwin<br />

2007: 229 x 152: 248pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-94827-2: $145.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-94828-9: $39.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415948289<br />

In this important new work,<br />

two respected criminologists<br />

challenge the characterization<br />

of the new ‘bad girl’, arguing<br />

that it is only a new attempt to<br />

punish girls who are not the<br />

stereotypical depiction of good.<br />

Through interviews with young<br />

women, educators and people<br />

in the criminal justice system,<br />

Beyond Bad Girls exposes the<br />

formal and informal systems of<br />

socio-cultural control imposed<br />

on girls.<br />

Violence Against Women<br />

Vulnerable Populations<br />

Douglas A. Brownridge<br />

Series: Contemporary Sociological Perspectives<br />

2009: 235 x 156: 320pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-99607-5: $144.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-99608-2: $41.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-87743-2<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415996082<br />

This essential reference develops<br />

a new sub-field on violence in<br />

vulnerable populations, with<br />

attendant approaches to theory<br />

and method.<br />

2nd Edition<br />

Theories of Race and Racism<br />

A Reader<br />

Edited by Les Back and John Solomos<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> Student Readers<br />

2009: 246 x 174: 744pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-41253-7: $198.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-41254-4: $56.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415412544<br />

This reader provides an<br />

up-to-date and comprehensive<br />

overview, bringing together the<br />

core ideas of authors who have<br />

helped to shape the study of<br />

race and racism and allowing<br />

readers to gain a feel for the<br />

changing terms of theoretical<br />

debate over time.<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

RACE, CLASS, GENDER AND CRIME<br />

The State of Sex<br />

Tourism, Sex and Sin in the New American<br />

Heartland<br />

Barbara G. Brents, Crystal A. Jackson and<br />

Kathryn Hausbeck<br />

Series: Contemporary Sociological Perspectives<br />

2009: 229 x 152: 320pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-92947-9: $150.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-92948-6: $34.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-86025-0<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415929486<br />

This study of Nevada’s brothels<br />

uses empirical data and<br />

sociological theory to situate<br />

the United States’ only legal<br />

brothel industry in the political<br />

economy of contemporary<br />

tourism. The personal accounts<br />

of sex workers make this a<br />

compelling read for students<br />

and those interested in the sex<br />

industry.<br />

2nd Edition<br />

Racist America<br />

Roots, Current Realities, and Future<br />

Reparations<br />

Joe R. Feagin, Texas A&M University, USA<br />

2010: 229 x 152: 376pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-99206-0: $154.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-99207-7: $34.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-89425-5<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415992077<br />

This second edition of Joe<br />

Feagin’s Racist America is<br />

extensively revised and<br />

thoroughly updated, with a<br />

special eye toward racism issues<br />

cropping up constantly in the<br />

Barack Obama era.<br />

13


14<br />

RACE, CLASS, GENDER AND CRIME<br />

The White Racial Frame<br />

Centuries of Racial Framing and Counter-<br />

Framing<br />

Joe R. Feagin, Texas A&M University, USA<br />

‘ Joe Feagin’s book could not<br />

be more timely or<br />

important. The ‘white racial<br />

frame’ is an analytic tool of<br />

great precision, deployed<br />

here both for a fresh and<br />

challenging look at<br />

American history, and for<br />

exciting proposals for more<br />

productive forms of<br />

education about race and<br />

racism.’ – Jane H. Hill,<br />

Anthropology, Emerita<br />

University of Arizona<br />

This book examines how and why this white racial frame<br />

emerged in North America, how and why it has evolved<br />

socially over time, which racial groups are framed within<br />

it, how it has operated in the past and in the present for<br />

both white Americans and Americans of color, and how<br />

the latter have long responded with strategies of<br />

resistance that include enduring counter-frames.<br />

2009: 229 x 152: 264pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-99438-5: $144.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-99439-2: $34.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-89064-6<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415994392<br />

Race, Law, and American<br />

Society<br />

1607-Present<br />

Gloria J. Browne-Marshall<br />

Series: Criminology and Justice Studies<br />

In Race, Law, and American<br />

Society: 1607 to Present Gloria<br />

Browne-Marshall traces the<br />

history of racial discrimination<br />

in American law from colonial<br />

times to the present, analyzing<br />

the key court cases that<br />

established America’s racial<br />

system and showing their<br />

impact on American society.<br />

Throughout, she places<br />

advocates for freedom and<br />

equality at the center, moving<br />

from their struggle for physical freedom in the slavery<br />

era to more recent battles for equal rights and economic<br />

equality.<br />

2007: 229 x 152: 416pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-95293-4: $145.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-95294-1: $41.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415952941<br />

Yes We Can?<br />

White Racial Framing and the 2008<br />

Presidential Campaign<br />

Adia Harvey-Wingfield and Joe R. Feagin<br />

‘Debunking the whitewashed<br />

illusion that we are<br />

living in a ‘post-racial’<br />

America, the authors<br />

convincingly demonstrate<br />

that race continues to play a<br />

fundamental role shaping<br />

U.S. politics by placing the<br />

Obama Presidential<br />

campaign at the center of<br />

analysis. An excellent<br />

overview of how race and<br />

racism play out in<br />

contemporary U.S. society’ – Jake Alimahomed-<br />

Wilson, Sociology, California State University, Long Beach<br />

For readers and scholars who are interested in a<br />

sociologically-grounded assessment of the historic<br />

presidential campaign of 2008, this book provides such<br />

an analysis.<br />

2009: 229 x 152: 296pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-99986-1: $139.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-99987-8: $31.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-83615-6<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415999878<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

2nd Edition<br />

Hopeful Girls, Troubled Boys<br />

Race and Gender Inequality in Urban<br />

Education<br />

Nancy Lopez, University of New Mexico, USA<br />

An exciting revision of a classic book, Hopeful Girls,<br />

Troubled Boys focuses on the life histories of the largest<br />

immigrant group in New York City, the youth from the<br />

Dominican Republic, the West Indies, and Haiti, to<br />

explain why girls of color are succeeding at higher rates<br />

than their male counterparts. Nancy Lopez brings to life<br />

the attitudes, feelings, and expectations of these teens,<br />

and shows that girls maintain optimistic outlooks on<br />

their lives, while boys are ambivalent about the promises<br />

of education. This fascinating account explains how and<br />

why our schools and cities are failing boys of color.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Unequal Schooling: Race and Gender<br />

Disparity in Urban Education 2. From ‘Mamasita’ to<br />

‘Hoodlum’: Stigma as Lived Experience 3. ‘Urban High<br />

Schools’: The Reality of Unequal Schooling 4. ‘Problem’ Boys<br />

5. Rewarding Femininity 6. Homegrown: How the Family<br />

Does Gender 7. After Graduation: Race and Gender in the<br />

Workplace 8. Education as a Way Out: The Future of Latino<br />

and Black Education<br />

August 2012: 229 x 152: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-87422-9: $145.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-87423-6: $29.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415874236<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website<br />

NEW<br />

Space, Place, and Violence<br />

Violence and the Embodied Geographies of<br />

Race, Sex and Gender<br />

James A. Tyner, Kent State University, USA<br />

Space, Place, and Violence<br />

seeks to uncover that which is<br />

too apparent: to critically<br />

question both violent<br />

geographies and the<br />

geographies of violence. With a<br />

focus on direct violence, this<br />

book situates violent acts within<br />

the context of broader political<br />

and structural conditions.<br />

Violence, it is argued, is both a<br />

social and spatial practice.<br />

Adopting a geographic<br />

perspective, Space, Place, and Violence provides a critical<br />

reading of how violence takes place and also produces<br />

place. Specifically, four spatial vignettes – home, school,<br />

streets, and community – are introduced, designed so<br />

that students may think critically how ‘race’, sex, gender,<br />

and class inform violent geographies and geographies of<br />

violence.<br />

Selected Contents: Chapter 1: Everyday Geographies of<br />

Violence Violence as Subject. Towards a Geographic<br />

Understanding of Violence. Making Space, Constructing<br />

Place Chapter 2: Home Home as Refuge? Constructions<br />

of Home. Intimate Partner Violence. Same-Sex Domestic<br />

Violence. Home, Nation, and Violence. Conclusions<br />

Chapter 3: School Discipline In/Of Schools. School Subjects<br />

and Violence. Conclusions Chapter 4: The Streets<br />

Modernity and the Serial Killer. The Serial Killer as Urban<br />

Redeveloper. (Eliminating) Sex on the Streets. The Streets of<br />

Ciudad Juarez. Conclusions Chapter 5: Community<br />

Communities and Sovereign Geographies. Shifting Borders,<br />

Shaping Communities. (B)ordering Communities.<br />

Communal Belonging and Losings. Conclusions<br />

Chapter 6: Violence and the Pedagogy of Impunity<br />

October 2011: 229 x 152: 240pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-88083-1: $145.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-88085-5: $34.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-80212-0<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415880855


2nd Edition<br />

Operation Gatekeeper and<br />

Beyond<br />

The War On ‘Illegals’ and the Remaking of<br />

the U.S. – Mexico Boundary<br />

Joseph Nevins, Vassar College, USA<br />

This is a major revision and<br />

update of Nevins’ earlier classic<br />

and is an ideal text for use with<br />

undergraduate students in a<br />

wide variety of courses on<br />

immigration, transnational<br />

issues, and the politics of race,<br />

inclusion and exclusion. Not<br />

only has the author brought his<br />

subject completely up to date,<br />

but as a ‘case’ of increasing<br />

economic integration and<br />

liberalization along with<br />

growing immigration control, the US / Mexico Border<br />

and its history is put in a wider global context of similar<br />

development s elsewhere.<br />

2010: 229 x 152: 312pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-99693-8: $144.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-99694-5: $34.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-85773-1<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415996945<br />

Confronting Global Gender<br />

Justice<br />

Women’s Lives, Human Rights<br />

Edited by Debra B. Bergoffen, Paula Ruth Gilbert,<br />

Tamara Harvey and Connie L. McNeely, all at<br />

George Mason University, USA<br />

2010: 234 x 156: 344pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-78078-0: $144.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-78079-7: $53.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415780797<br />

Confronting Global Gender<br />

Justice: Women’s Lives, Human<br />

Rights examines the most<br />

complex and demanding<br />

challenges facing theorists,<br />

activists, artists, and educators<br />

engaged in establishing<br />

women’s rights as human rights<br />

and fighting to make these<br />

rights realities in women’s lives.<br />

Issues addressed include:<br />

trafficking, AIDS, immigration,<br />

war-time violence, and legal<br />

battles.<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Feminist Criminology<br />

Claire M. Renzetti, University of Kentucky, USA<br />

Series: Key Ideas in Criminology<br />

Feminist criminology grew out<br />

of the Women’s Movement of<br />

the 1970s in response to the<br />

neglect of women by, and the<br />

male dominance of, mainstream<br />

criminology. This important<br />

volume traces the development<br />

of feminist criminology and<br />

assesses its impact on the<br />

discipline. Examining the<br />

development of feminist<br />

theoretical perspectives and<br />

empirical research in<br />

criminology, this key book investigates their impact on<br />

research methods and topics, pedagogy, and curriculum<br />

and employment in academic and criminal justice<br />

professions.<br />

Claire M. Renzetti considers the potential for feminist<br />

criminology to transform the discipline, making it more<br />

progressive by including, as a central principle, the need<br />

to analyze intersecting inequalities, especially those of<br />

gender, race and class, in order to fully understand both<br />

crime and justice. She skilfully gives a balanced view of<br />

the subject, incorporating both the successes and<br />

failures of feminist criminology and provides an<br />

extensive, up-to-date bibliography which allows<br />

criminology students to access, for their own research<br />

purposes, the large body of feminist criminological<br />

literature.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. The Emergence of Feminist<br />

Criminology 2. Feminist Criminology at the Close of the<br />

Twentieth Century 3. Feminist Criminology in the<br />

Twenty-First Century 4. Assessing the Impact of Feminist<br />

Criminology in Academe 5. Assessing the Impact of Feminist<br />

Criminology in Criminal Justice Practice 6. The Future of<br />

Feminist Criminology and the Future of Criminology:<br />

Separate but Equal?<br />

May 2012: 198 x 129: 192pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-38143-7: $128.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-38142-0: $31.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415381420<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

RACE, CLASS, GENDER AND CRIME<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> International<br />

Handbook of Crime and<br />

Gender Studies<br />

Edited by Claire M. Renzetti, University of<br />

Kentucky, USA, Susan Miller, University of<br />

Delaware, USA and Angela Gover, University of<br />

Colorado, USA<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> International Handbooks<br />

The <strong>Routledge</strong> International Handbook of Crime and<br />

Gender Studies presents original essays from scholars<br />

from around the world in an effort to broaden our<br />

understanding of international issues related to gender<br />

and crime. It shows how social variables such as race/<br />

ethnicity, social class, sexual orientation, age, and ability<br />

status, intersect with gender to produce differential<br />

outcomes to a particular gender and crime topic.<br />

It introduces up-to-date perspectives within the<br />

following six topical areas: theoretical and<br />

methodological approaches to the study or gender and<br />

crime; gender and victimization; gender and offending;<br />

gendered justice; gendered work in the criminal justice<br />

system, and future directions in gender and crime<br />

research. Additionally, the handbook incorporates<br />

international/cross-cultural data and discussion.<br />

The <strong>Routledge</strong> International Handbook of Crime and<br />

Gender Studies is intended for academics, advanced<br />

students, researchers, and policy-makers globally.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: Theoretical and<br />

Methodological Approaches to the Study of Gender<br />

and Crime 1. Historical and International Development<br />

2. Emergence of Feminist Criminology 3. Feminist Theories<br />

4. Ethical Dilemmas in Research, Methodologies Inspired by<br />

Feminist Principles, and Innovative Methodologies (Including<br />

Ethical Dilemmas in Gender and Crime Research)<br />

Part 2: Gender and Victimization 5. Overview on Violent<br />

Crime, Victimization, and Important Gender Distinctions<br />

6. Fear of Crime 7. The Relationship Between Juvenile<br />

Victimization and Offending 8. Rape, Sexual Assault, and<br />

Intimate Partner Violence 9. Consequences of Victimization<br />

Part 3: Gender and Offending 10. Violent Crime<br />

11. Gang Membership 12. Drugs 13. Property Crime<br />

14. White Collar Crime 15. Life Course Perspective and<br />

Desistance in Offending 16. Relationship Between<br />

Victimization and Offending 17. Sex Offenders<br />

Part 4: Gendered Experiences of Victims and Offenders<br />

in the Criminal Justice System 18. Interactions Among<br />

Law Enforcement Officers and Victims and Offenders<br />

19. Corrections and Gender-Specific Programming<br />

20. Sentencing and Punishment 21. Offender Re-Entry<br />

Part 5: Gendered Work in the Criminal Justice System<br />

22. Policing Styles and Decision Making 23. Lawyers and<br />

Judges 24. Corrections 25. Gaps in Knowledge and<br />

Emergent Areas in Criminology 26. Backlash Against<br />

Feminism<br />

September 2012: 246 x 174: 536pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-78216-6: $180.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415782166<br />

15


16<br />

RACE, CLASS, GENDER AND CRIME<br />

A Theory of African American<br />

Offending<br />

Race, Racism, and Crime<br />

James D. Unnever, University of South Florida, USA<br />

and Shaun L. Gabbidon, Pennsylvania State Capital<br />

College, USA<br />

Series: Criminology and Justice Studies<br />

‘This book is a must-read for<br />

criminologists and<br />

sociologists. Although the<br />

book is written for social<br />

scientists concerned with<br />

explaining crime, it is likely<br />

to be of interest to anyone<br />

striving to understand the<br />

high amount of crime that<br />

exists in many African<br />

American communities. I<br />

look forward to using it as<br />

one of the texts in the<br />

criminology course that I teach.’ – Ronald Simons,<br />

Sociology, University of Georgia<br />

A little more than a century ago, the famous social<br />

scientist W.E.B. Du Bois asserted that a true<br />

understanding of African American offending must be<br />

grounded in the ‘real conditions’ of what it means to be<br />

black living in a racial stratified society. Today and<br />

according to official statistics, African American men –<br />

about six percent of the population of the United States<br />

– account for nearly sixty percent of the robbery arrests<br />

in the United States. To the authors of this book, this<br />

and many other glaring racial disparities in offending<br />

centered on African Americans is clearly related to their<br />

unique history and to their past and present racial<br />

subordination. Inexplicably, however, no criminological<br />

theory exists that fully articulates the nuances of the<br />

African American experience and how they relate to<br />

their offending. In readable fashion for undergraduate<br />

students, the general public, and criminologists alike,<br />

this book for the first time presents the foundations for<br />

the development of an African American theory of<br />

offending.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Two Worlds Far<br />

Apart 3. Perceptions of a Racist Criminal Justice System<br />

4. Perceptions of Racial Discrimination 5. Racial Socialization<br />

6. Anger, Hostility, Defiance and Weak Social Bonds<br />

7. Conclusions<br />

February 2011: 229 x 152: 288pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-88357-3: $149.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-88358-0: $35.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-82856-4<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415883580<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Disability, Hate Crime and<br />

Violence<br />

Edited by Alan Roulstone, University of<br />

Northumbria, UK and Hannah Mason-Bish,<br />

Roehampton University, UK<br />

This book provides a comprehensive and interdisciplinary<br />

examination of disability, hate crime and violence,<br />

exploring its emergence on the policy agenda. Engaging<br />

with the latest debates in criminology, disability and<br />

violence studies, it goes beyond conventional notions of<br />

hate crime to look at violences in their myriad forms as<br />

they are seen to impact upon disabled people’s lives.<br />

Despite a raft of relevant policy and legislation, few have<br />

attempted to draw together research on the disabled as<br />

victims of hate crime and violence. This innovative<br />

volume conceptualizes issues of disability, hate crime and<br />

violence and connects empirical research with theoretical<br />

insights. Making links between criminal justice policy,<br />

social care and welfare, it highlights areas of best<br />

practice and makes suggestions for policy and legislative<br />

reform. Disability, Hate Crime and Violence is written in<br />

accessible language, with minimal jargon and an<br />

international focus. Each chapter is grounded in research<br />

and practice, with relevant policy and legislation clearly<br />

signposted throughout.<br />

Disability, Hate Crime and Violence provides a much<br />

needed theoretical and practical investigation of the key<br />

issues around disabled hate crime and violence. It is an<br />

important work for students and academics researching<br />

and studying in disability studies, criminology, social<br />

policy and sociology, as well as those with an interest in<br />

domestic violence studies and broader historical and<br />

philosophical constructions of disability, violence and<br />

social harms.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: Conceptualising Disability,<br />

Hate Crime and Violence 1. The Social Construction of<br />

‘Disability Hate Crime’ 2. Vulnerable to Misinterpretation:<br />

Disabled People, ‘Vulnerability’and the Fight for Legal<br />

Recognition 3. Theorising the Potential of Disability in Hate<br />

Crime Policy 4. Disability and the Continuum of Violence:<br />

Explaining Sexual ‘Vulnerability’ 5. Language and the Media<br />

Portrayal of ‘Disability Hate Crime’ 6. International<br />

Perspectives on ‘Disability Hate Crime’ Part 2: Experiences<br />

of Disability, Hate Crime and Violence 7. Casual and<br />

Institutional Disablism 8. Disability and Domestic Violence<br />

9. The Realities of Disablist Hate Crime: A Personal Account<br />

10. Making Disablist Hate Crime Visible: Addressing the<br />

Challenges in Improving Reporting 11. Hate Crime or Mate<br />

Crime? 12. After Disablist Hate Crime: Which Interventions<br />

Really Work to Resist Victimhood and Build Resilience?<br />

August 2012: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67431-7: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415674317<br />

RACE, CLASS, GENDER AND CRIME BACKLIST<br />

TITLE AUTHOR(S)/EDITOR(S) PUB<br />

DATE<br />

ISBN BINDING PRICE USD<br />

Dirty Dancing Rachela Colosi 2010 978-1-84392-817-1 Hardback $125.00<br />

Working with Women Offenders in the<br />

Community<br />

Edited by Rosemary Sheehan,<br />

Gill McIvor and Chris Trotter<br />

978-1-84392-818-8 e-Book<br />

2010 978-1-84392-887-4 Paperback $53.50<br />

978-1-84392-888-1 Hardback $133.00<br />

978-0-203-83295-0 e-Book<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website<br />

RELATED JOURNAL<br />

Ethnic and Racial Studies<br />

Editors: Martin Bulmer - University of<br />

Surrey, UK and John Solomos - City<br />

University London, UK<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/rers<br />

Journal of Ethnic and<br />

Migration Studies<br />

Editor: Russell King - Sussex Centre for<br />

Migration Research, University of Sussex,<br />

UK<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/cjms<br />

Patterns of Prejudice<br />

Editors: David Cesarani - Royal Holloway,<br />

University of London, UK, Tony Kushner<br />

- University of Southampton, UK and<br />

Barbara Rosenbaum - University of<br />

Southampton, UK<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/rpop<br />

Journal of Gender Studies<br />

Editors: Blu Tirohl (Chair of Board),<br />

John Mercer (Acting Editor) - Birmingham<br />

City University and Rachel Alsop (Acting<br />

Editor) - University of Hull, UK<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/cjgs<br />

NORA: Nordic Journal of<br />

Feminist and Gender<br />

Research<br />

Editors in Chief: Dr. Cecilia Åsberg<br />

- Linköping University, Sweden and<br />

Dr. Malin Rönnblom - Umeå University,<br />

Sweden<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/swom


CRIME AND SOCIETY<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Advances in Ethnography<br />

Dick Hobbs, London School of Economics, UK and Geoffrey Pearson, Goldsmiths<br />

University of London, UK<br />

Ethnography is a celebrated, if contested, research methodology that offers unprecedented<br />

access to people’s intimate lives, their often hidden social worlds and the meanings they attach<br />

to these. The intensity of ethnographic fieldwork often makes considerable personal and<br />

emotional demands on the researcher, while the final product is a vivid human document with<br />

personal resonance impossible to recreate by the application of any other social science<br />

methodology. This series aims to highlight the best, most innovative ethnographic work<br />

available from both new and established scholars.<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Builders<br />

Class, Gender and Ethnicity in the<br />

Construction Industry<br />

Darren Thiel, University of Essex, UK<br />

This book outlines the on-going connections and<br />

intersections between economy, state, class and culture<br />

in the construction industry by taking a close-up look at<br />

a section of building workers and businessmen.<br />

May 2012: 234 x 156: 208pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-68864-2: $145.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415688642<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

City, Street and Citizen<br />

The Measure of the Ordinary<br />

Suzanne Hall, London School of Economics, UK<br />

This book offers a nuanced account of urban life,<br />

alongside the underlying economic and political<br />

structure of society and explores how individuals and<br />

groups participate in or disengage from cultural<br />

differences within the context of local life.<br />

May 2012: 234 x 156: 208pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-68865-9: $145.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415688659<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Tac<br />

Young People, Gender and Neighbourhood<br />

Drug Markets<br />

Kate O’Brien, University of Kent, UK<br />

Drawing on a two-year ethnographic study undertaken<br />

in a Northern city in the UK, this book explores the<br />

political economy of drug dealing and crime amongst<br />

children and young people at the local level. It also<br />

provides illuminating description and analysis of the<br />

gendered nature of their drug-taking practices and<br />

rituals.<br />

October 2012: 234 x 156: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-206-3: $74.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843922063<br />

NEW<br />

Crack Cocaine Users<br />

High Society and Low Life in South London<br />

Daniel Briggs, University of East London, UK<br />

October 2011: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67133-0: $130.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415671330<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Based on ethnographic research<br />

of street crack cocaine users, this<br />

book unpacks the myths and<br />

stigma of their drug use and<br />

their fragile position in society in<br />

an effort to better understand<br />

them.<br />

Changing Lives, Changing Drug<br />

Journeys<br />

Drug Taking Decisions from Adolescence to<br />

Adulthood<br />

Lisa Williams, University of Manchester, UK<br />

This book describes how a group of young people make<br />

decisions about drug taking. It charts the decision<br />

making process of recreational drug takers and non-drug<br />

takers as they mature from adolescence into young<br />

adulthood.<br />

August 2012: 234 x 156: 240 pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-894-2: $135.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843928942<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

CRIME AND SOCIETY<br />

Conflict and Crisis<br />

Communication<br />

Principles and Practice<br />

Edited by Carol A. Ireland, University of Central<br />

Lancashire, UK, Martin Fisher, NOMS, UK and<br />

Gregory M. Vecchi, FBI, USA<br />

This book presents the most up<br />

to date view of conflict and<br />

crisis communication, and its<br />

clear practical application from<br />

experts in the field. It will be of<br />

interest to law enforcement<br />

agencies both nationally and<br />

internationally, as well as a<br />

range of professionals working<br />

in forensic settings. It will also<br />

be of interest to postgraduate<br />

students studying in forensic<br />

psychology and forensic mental<br />

health.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Conflict and Crisis Negotiation: The<br />

Negotiated Resolution Model 2. Negotiation: Principles and<br />

Theoretical Underpinnings 3. Crisis Situations:<br />

Communications, Goals, and Techniques 4. Application of<br />

the Critical Incident to Mental Illness and Cognitive<br />

Impairment: Considerations and Implications 5. Application<br />

of the Critical Incident to Personality Disorder: Considerations<br />

and Implications 6. Ethical Considerations in a Conflict and<br />

Crisis Situation 7. Expertise of the Negotiator in Conflict and<br />

Crisis Communication 8. When the Management of the<br />

Critical Incident Goes Wrong: Pitfalls and Suggested<br />

Approaches 9. Post Critical Incident: Considerations<br />

10. Held Against their Choice: Behaviour, Considerations and<br />

Implications for the Captive<br />

April 2011: 234 x 156: 240pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-61511-2: $135.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-61512-9: $49.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415615129<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Criminal Recidivism<br />

Explanation, Prediction and Prevention<br />

David P. Farrington, University of Cambridge, UK<br />

and Georgia Zara, University of Turin, Italy<br />

This book aims to investigate criminal recidivism, the<br />

process involved in continuing offending and in delaying<br />

desistance from a criminal career, focusing on why, how<br />

and for how long an individual continues committing<br />

crimes.<br />

Selected Contents: Introduction Section 1: Explanation<br />

of Recidivism 1. Types of Official Contacts 2. Measures of<br />

Recidiv 3. Criminal Career Features: Duration, Persistence,<br />

Intergenerational Transmission of Antisociality and Violence,<br />

Residual Career Length, Desistance 4. Case Studies<br />

Section 2: Prediction of Recidivism 5. Risk Assessment<br />

6. Recidivism of Violent Offending 7. Recidivism of Sexual<br />

Offending 8. Psychopathy and Criminal Recidivism<br />

Section 3: Prevention of Recidivism 9. Evaluating<br />

Effectiveness of Programmes 10. Rehabilitation and<br />

Treatment of Offenders 11. Applying Research to Policy.<br />

Conclusion<br />

December 2012: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-707-5: $79.95<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-706-8: $34.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843927068<br />

17


18<br />

CRIME AND SOCIETY<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Cultures of Desistance<br />

Rehabilitation, Reintegration and Ethnic<br />

Minorities<br />

Adam Calverley, University of Hull, UK<br />

Series: International Series on Desistance and<br />

Rehabilitation Cultures of Desistance explores how<br />

structural (families, friends peer groups, employment,<br />

social capital)and cultural (religion, values, recognition)<br />

ethnic differences affected the environment in which<br />

their desistance took place. For Indians and Bangladeshis<br />

desistance was characterized as a collective experience<br />

involving their families actively intervening in their lives.<br />

In contrast, Black and dual heritage offenders’ desistance<br />

was a much more individualistic endeavour. The book<br />

suggests a need for a research agenda and justice policy<br />

that is sensitive to desisters’ structural location and wider<br />

culture that promotes and supports desisters’ efforts.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Literature Review 3.<br />

Methodology 4. Indians and their Desistance from Crime 5.<br />

Bangladeshis and Desistance from Crime 6. Experiences of<br />

Desistance among Black and Dual Heritage Offenders 7.<br />

Thinking Through Ethnic Differences in Experiences of<br />

Desistance 8. Conclusion. Appendix I: Research Outline:<br />

Ethnicity and Desistance from Crime. Appendix II: Research<br />

Instrument Minority Ethnic Desistance Study<br />

July 2012: 234 x 156: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67261-0: $120.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415672610<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Foundations of Offender<br />

Rehabilitation<br />

Sharon Casey, Andrew Day, Jim Vess and<br />

Tony Ward, all at Deakin University, Australia<br />

This textbook offers a comprehensive approach to<br />

forensic and correctional psychology, demonstrating<br />

how theory and practise can be applied and integrated<br />

in offender rehabilitation and written by intentionally<br />

recognized experts within the field.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: Theoretical Foundations<br />

1. Theories of Offending 2. Theories of Offender<br />

Rehabilitation Part 2: From Theory to Practice 3. Theories<br />

of Behaviour and Behaviour Change 4. Forensic Assessment<br />

and Case Formulation Part 3: Practice Examples: Working<br />

with Different Groups 5. Sex Offenders 6. Violent<br />

Offenders 7. Substance Use 8. Female Offenders 9. Young<br />

Offenders 10. Mentally Disordered Offenders<br />

11. Professional Practice<br />

August 2012: 234 x 156: 280pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67916-9: $130.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-67917-6: $51.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415679176<br />

NEW<br />

Eyes Everywhere<br />

The Global Growth of Camera Surveillance<br />

Edited by Aaron Doyle, Carelton University, Canada,<br />

Randy Lippert, University of Windsor, Canada and<br />

David Lyon, Queen’s University, Canada<br />

Eyes Everywhere provides the<br />

first international perspective on<br />

the development of camera<br />

surveillance. It scrutinizes the<br />

quiet but massive expansion of<br />

camera surveillance around the<br />

world in recent years, focusing<br />

especially on Canada, the UK<br />

and the USA but also including<br />

less-debated but important<br />

contexts such as Brazil, China,<br />

Japan, Mexico, South Africa and<br />

Turkey. Containing both broad<br />

overviews and illuminating case-studies, including<br />

cameras in taxi-cabs and at mega-events such as the<br />

Olympics, the book offers a valuable oversight on the<br />

status of camera surveillance in the second decade of<br />

the twenty-first century.<br />

The book will be fascinating reading for students and<br />

scholars of camera surveillance as well as policy makers<br />

and practitioners from the police, chambers of<br />

commerce, private security firms and privacy- and<br />

data-protection agencies.<br />

Selected Contents: Preface 1. Introduction<br />

Part 1: Situating Camera Surveillance Growth 2. ‘There’s<br />

no Success like Failure and Failure’s no Success at all’: Some<br />

Critical Reflections on the Global Growth of Camera<br />

Surveillance 3. What Goes Up, Must Come Down: On the<br />

Moribundity of Camera Networks in the UK 4. Seeing<br />

Surveillantly: Surveillance as Social Practice<br />

Part 2: International Growth of Camera Surveillance<br />

5. Cameras in Context: A Comparison of the Place of Video<br />

Surveillance in Japan and Brazil 6. The Growth and Further<br />

Proliferation of Camera Surveillance in South Africa 7. The<br />

Piecemeal Development of Camera Surveillance in Canada<br />

Part 3: Evolving Forms and Uses of Camera Surveillance<br />

8. The Electronic Eye of the Police: The Provincial Information<br />

and Security System in Istanbul 9. Policing in the Age of<br />

Information: Automated Number Place Recognition<br />

10. Video Surveillance in Vancouver: Legacies of the Games<br />

11. Selling Surveillance: The Introduction of Cameras in<br />

Ottawa Taxis 12. Deploying Camera Surveillance Images: The<br />

Case of Crime Stoppers 13. Hidden Changes: From CCTV to<br />

‘Smart’ Video Surveillance Part 4: Public Support, Media<br />

Visions and the Politics of Representation<br />

14. Anti-Surveillance Activists v. The Dancing Heads of<br />

Terrorism: Signal Crimes, Media Frames, Symbolic Politics and<br />

Camera Promotion 15. Surveillance Cameras and<br />

Synopticism: A Case Study in Mexico City 16. Surveillance<br />

Culture and Appropriation: CCTV as Found in Footage in<br />

Manu Luksch’s Faceless 17. ‘What Do You Think?’:<br />

International Public Opinion of Camera Surveillance<br />

18. Towards a Framework of Contextual Integrity: Legality,<br />

trust and compliance of CCTV Signage 19. Mitigating<br />

Asymmetric Visibilities: Towards a signage code for<br />

surveillance camera networks 20. Is it a ‘Search’?: The Legal<br />

Context of Camera Surveillance in Canada 21. Privacy As<br />

Security: Surveillance Camera Signage and Informed Consent<br />

22. Reversing the Conventional Wisdom on Video<br />

Surveillance in Canada<br />

December 2011: 234 x 156: 408pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-66864-4: $170.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-69655-5: $56.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415696555<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Studies in Crime and<br />

Society<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Sex Work, Labour and Mobility<br />

JaneMaree Maher, Sharon Pickering and<br />

Allison Gerard, all at Monash University, Australia<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> Studies in Crime and Society<br />

This books draws on extensive interviews with sex<br />

workers and regulators in the sexual services industry,<br />

examining their working lives, practices, labour market<br />

conditions and their engagement with domestic and<br />

international regulatory frameworks.<br />

September 2012: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-50653-3: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415506533<br />

State Crime and Resistance<br />

Edited by Elizabeth Stanley, Victoria University of<br />

Wellington, New Zealand and Jude McCulloch,<br />

Monash University, Australia<br />

Gathering together key scholars in the field and<br />

international case studies from the UK, USA, Australia<br />

and Asia, this book offers a deepened understanding of<br />

state crime through the practical and analytical lens of<br />

resistance.<br />

October 2012: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-69193-2: $120.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415691932<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2013<br />

Surveillance, Capital and<br />

Resistance<br />

Michael McCahill and Rachel L. Finn, both at<br />

University of Hull, UK<br />

The study of surveillance has been particularly good at<br />

studying the watchers, but not as good as studying the<br />

watched. This book places the subjects of surveillance on<br />

centre stage exploring the experiences of a diverse range<br />

of social groups.<br />

June 2013: 234 x 156: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-68863-5: $130.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415688635<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website


NEW<br />

Contesting the Politics of<br />

Genocidal Rape<br />

Affirming the Dignity of the Vulnerable<br />

Body<br />

Debra B. Bergoffen, George Mason University, USA<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> Research in Gender and Society<br />

When the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former<br />

Yugoslavia (ICTY) tried and convicted the Bosnian Serb<br />

soldiers who raped and sexually enslaved Muslim<br />

women and girls, it broke new legal and philosophical<br />

ground. In addition to identifying genocidal rape as a<br />

crime against humanity, the court, in finding that the<br />

rapes violated the women’s right to sexual selfdetermination,<br />

created a new human right – the right to<br />

sexual integrity. In grounding this human right in a<br />

woman’s body, a body traditionally gendered and<br />

stigmatized as vulnerable, this book argues, the ICTY<br />

transformed vulnerability from a sign of shame into a<br />

mark of our humanity. Doing this, the court directs us to<br />

challenge current meanings of bodily integrity and<br />

human dignity insofar as they define human rights as<br />

protecting the invulnerability of the body rather than as<br />

guaranteeing the dignity of the vulnerable body.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. The Case: Vulnerable Body on Trial<br />

2. Slavery, Torture Rape: Assaulting the Dignity of the<br />

Vulnerable Body 3. Genocidal Rape as Spectacle 4. The<br />

Verdict: Affirming the Dignity of the Vulnerable Body<br />

5. Representing the Human: The Lingua Franca of Human<br />

Rights 6. Of the Politics and Pleasures of the Vulnerable<br />

Body<br />

October 2011: 229 x 152: 144pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-89127-1: $125.00<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-34013-4<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415891271<br />

Internet and Surveillance<br />

The Challenges of Web 2.0 and Social<br />

Media<br />

Edited by Christian Fuchs, Uppsala University,<br />

Sweden, Kees Boersma, Vrije Universiteit<br />

Amsterdam, the Netherlands,<br />

Anders Albrechtslund, Aalborg University,<br />

Denmark and Marisol Sandoval, University of<br />

Salzburg, Austria<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> Studies in Science, Technology and<br />

Society<br />

The Internet has been transformed in the past years<br />

from a system primarily oriented on information<br />

provision into a medium for communication and<br />

community-building. In a world of global economic<br />

competition, economic crisis, and fear of terrorism after<br />

9/11, both corporations and state institutions have a<br />

growing interest in accessing this personal data. The<br />

contributions in this book provide a comprehensive look<br />

at issues that are redefining our entire concept of privacy<br />

and surveillance.<br />

September 2011: 229 x 152: 352pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-89160-8: $125.00<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-80643-2<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415891608<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Prostitution Scandals in China<br />

Policing, Media and Society<br />

Elaine Jeffreys, University of Technology, Sydney,<br />

Australia<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> Studies on China in Transition<br />

Prostitution Scandals in China presents an examination<br />

of media coverage of prostitution-related scandals in<br />

contemporary China. It demonstrates that the subject of<br />

prostitution is not only widely debated, but also that<br />

these public discussions have ramifications for some of<br />

the key social, legal and political issues affecting citizens<br />

of the PRC. Further, this book shows how these public<br />

discussions impact on issues as diverse as sexual<br />

exploitation, civil rights, government corruption, child<br />

and youth protection, policing abuses, and public health.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Prostitution, Policing and the Media<br />

in Reform-Era China 2. Forced Prostitution: China’s<br />

Contemporary Chastity Heroes 3. Youth Prostitution: China’s<br />

Growing Sex Market 4. Male-Male Prostitution: China’s<br />

‘First’ Same-Sex Prostitution Case 5. Penalizing Buyers of<br />

Sex: China’s ‘Whoring Professor’ Case 6. Exposing Police<br />

Corruption: China’s Virgin Prostitute Cases 7. Questioning<br />

Police Powers: China’s Public Sentencing of Minor<br />

Prostitution Offenders 8. Regulating Prostitution: China’s<br />

100 Per Cent Condom Use Program<br />

May 2012: 234 x 156: 240pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-50342-6: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415503426<br />

NEW<br />

Due Process Denied:<br />

Detentions and Deportations<br />

in the United States<br />

Tanya Golash-Boza, University of Kansas, USA<br />

Series: Framing 21st Century Social Issues<br />

Due Process Denied describes the consequences of this<br />

lack of due process through the stories of deportees and<br />

detainees. People who have lived nearly all of their lives<br />

in the United States have been detained and deported<br />

for minor crimes, without regard for constitutional limits<br />

on disproportionate punishment. The court’s insistence<br />

that deportation is not punishment does not align with<br />

the experiences of deportees. For many, deportation is<br />

one of the worst imaginable punishments.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Immigration<br />

Detention: Prison by Another Name 3. Deportation:<br />

Banishment in the 21st Century 4. Conclusion<br />

February 2012: 254 x 178: 66pp<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-50930-5: $9.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-12392-8<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415509305<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

CRIME AND SOCIETY<br />

European Developments in<br />

Corporate Criminal Liability<br />

Edited by James Gobert and Ana-Maria Pascal,<br />

both at University of Essex, UK<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> Advances in Criminology<br />

The public outcry against corporate misconduct has<br />

never been louder. Union Carbide, Continental Airlines,<br />

Enron, Goldman Sachs, and BP find themselves staring<br />

at potential criminal prosecutions. The spotlight now<br />

focuses on the criminal law and whether it is capable of<br />

dealing with these corporate ‘villains.’ This book<br />

examines the legal challenges facing the world’s legal<br />

systems and analyzes the laws of corporate criminal<br />

liability throughout Europe.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: Thematic Issues<br />

Part 2: Organisational v. Individual Liability Part 3: Particular<br />

Offences Part 4: Country Reports<br />

June 2011: 234 x 156: 384pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-62066-6: $138.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415620666<br />

The Sociology of Terrorism<br />

People, Places and Processes<br />

Stephen Vertigans, Robert Gordon University, UK<br />

This is the first terrorism textbook based on sociological<br />

research. It adopts an innovative framework that draws<br />

together historical and modern, local and global, and<br />

social processes for a range of individuals, groups and<br />

societies. Individual behaviour and dispositions are<br />

embedded within these broader relationships and<br />

activities, allowing a more holistic account of terrorism<br />

to emerge. In addition, the shifting forms of<br />

identification and interwoven attitudes to political<br />

violence are discussed in order to explain the emergence,<br />

continuation, and end of ‘terrorist’ careers.<br />

August 2011: 234 x 156: 232pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-57265-1: $155.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-57266-8: $44.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415572668<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2013<br />

Crime and the Lifecourse<br />

Michael Benson, University of Cincinnatti, USA<br />

Series: Criminology and Justice Studies<br />

Crime and the Lifecourse: An Introduction by Michael L.<br />

Benson provides a comprehensive overview of<br />

contemporary research and theory on the life-course<br />

approach to crime. The book emphasizes a conceptual<br />

understanding of this approach. A special feature is the<br />

integration of qualitative and quantitative research on<br />

criminal life histories.<br />

February 2013: 235 x 156: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-99492-7: $145.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-99493-4: $39.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-88989-3<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415994934<br />

19


20<br />

CRIME AND SOCIETY<br />

Suicide Bombings<br />

Riaz Hassan, Flinders University, Australia<br />

Series: Shortcuts<br />

In an age when the Western<br />

world is preoccupied with<br />

worries about weapons of mass<br />

destruction in terrorist hands,<br />

terrorists across many parts of<br />

the globe are using a more basic<br />

device as a weapon – life itself.<br />

Suicide bombing has become a<br />

weapon of choice among<br />

terrorist groups because of its<br />

lethality and unrivalled ability to<br />

cause mayhem and fear, but<br />

what is the real driving force<br />

behind these attacks? For the first time, Suicide<br />

Bombings analyzes concrete data from The Suicide<br />

Terrorism Database at Flinders University, Australia, to<br />

explain what motivates the perpetrators. The results<br />

serve to largely discredit common wisdom that religion<br />

and an impressionable personality are the principal<br />

causes, and show rather that a cocktail of motivations<br />

fuel these attacks which include politics, humiliation,<br />

revenge, retaliation, and altruism.<br />

Suicide Bombings provides a short but incisive insight<br />

into this much publicized form of terrorism, and as such<br />

is an informative and engaging resource for students,<br />

academics, and indeed anyone with an interest in this<br />

topic.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Life as a Weapon: Historical Roots of<br />

a Modern Phenomenon 2. The Global Rise of Suicide<br />

Bombings: Analysis of Trends 3. Explaining Suicide Bombings<br />

4. Suicide Bombings: Homicidal Killing or a Weapon of War?<br />

5. What Have we Learned? Appendix Table A<br />

April 2011: 198 x 129: 128pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-58886-7: $104.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-58887-4: $33.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415588874<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

The Corporate Criminal<br />

Steve Tombs, Liverpool John Moores University, UK<br />

and David Whyte, Liverpool University, UK<br />

Series: Key Ideas in Criminology<br />

Treating the corporation as if it were a human person is<br />

ubiquitous in contemporary political, cultural and legal<br />

constructions of the corporation – from the creation of<br />

‘brands’ and the representation of the corporation in<br />

fiction, to statutory and common law rules of corporate<br />

liability. It dominates both academic approaches and<br />

popular representations of the corporation, from<br />

discussions of corporate citizenship, corporate social<br />

responsibility and ‘corporate greed’.<br />

This book interrogates the concept of corporate<br />

‘personhood’ to understand the nature of corporate<br />

criminality and the prospects for more effective<br />

corporate control. Linking debates in criminology to<br />

broader claims around corporate social responsibility, it<br />

provides an understanding of the key ideas that explain<br />

the role of the corporation in the global economy.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. The Moral<br />

Corporation 3. The Corporate Citizen 4. The Victimised<br />

Corporation 5. Corporate Criminal Personality 6.<br />

Conclusion: Crime, Harm, Accountability<br />

June 2012: 198 x 129: 250pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-55636-1: $118.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-55637-8: $37.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415556378<br />

Public Criminology?<br />

Ian Loader, University of Oxford, UK and<br />

Richard Sparks, University of Edinburgh, UK<br />

Series: Key Ideas in Criminology<br />

2010: 198 x 129: 208pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-44549-8: $144.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-44550-4: $48.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415445504<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

How do criminologists engage<br />

with politics and public policy?<br />

This book is a sociological<br />

account of how criminologists<br />

have understood their craft, the<br />

positions they have taken on the<br />

controversies of their day, and<br />

an analysis of the dilemmas that<br />

confront those who work in the<br />

field today.<br />

The Scene of the Mass Crime<br />

History, Film, and International Tribunals<br />

Edited by Peter Goodrich and Christian Delage<br />

both at Cardoza School of Law, Yeshiva University,<br />

USA<br />

The Scene of the Mass Crime takes up the unwritten<br />

history of the peculiar yet highly visible form of war<br />

crimes trials. These trials are the first and continuing site<br />

of the interface of law, history and film. From<br />

Nuremberg to the contemporary trials in Cambodia, film,<br />

in particular, has been crucial both as evidence of<br />

atrocity and as the means of publicizing the proceedings.<br />

But what does film bring to justice? Can law successfully<br />

address war crimes, atrocities, genocide? What do the<br />

trials actually show? What form of justice is done, and<br />

how does it relate to ordinary courts and proceedings?<br />

What lessons can be drawn from this history for the very<br />

topical political issue of filming civil and criminal trials?<br />

This book takes up the diversity and complexity of these<br />

idiosyncratic and, in strict terms, generally extra-legal<br />

medial situations. Drawing on a fascinating diversity of<br />

public trials and filmic responses, from the Trial of the<br />

Gang of Four to the Gacaca local courts of Rwanda to<br />

the filmic symbolism of 9-11, from Soviet era show trials<br />

to Nazi People’s Courts leading international scholars<br />

address the theatrical, political, filmic and symbolic<br />

importance of show trials in making history, legitimating<br />

regimes and, most surprising of all, in attempting to heal<br />

trauma through law and through film. These essays will<br />

be of considerable interest to those working on<br />

international criminal law, transitional justice, genocide<br />

studies, and the relationship between law and film.<br />

May 2012: 234 x 156: 240pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-68894-9: $125.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-68895-6: $42.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-12198-6<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415688956<br />

Conflict, Citizenship and Civil<br />

Society<br />

Edited by Partick Baert, Sokratis M. Koniordos,<br />

Giovanna Procacci and Carlo Ruzza<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong>/ESA Studies in European Societies<br />

This book provides readers – students, researchers,<br />

academics, policy-makers, activists and interested<br />

non-specialists – with a sophisticated understanding of<br />

contemporary discussion, analysis and theorizing of<br />

issues pertaining to conflict, citizenship and civil society.<br />

2009: 234 x 156: 288pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-55873-0: $148.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415558730<br />

Interpreting Human Rights<br />

Social Science Perspectives<br />

Edited by Rhiannon Morgan and Bryan Turner<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> Advances in Sociology<br />

Written by an international group of leading social<br />

science scholars in the field of human rights, this volume<br />

situates the study of human rights in an open<br />

interdisciplinary terrain. Ranging over diverse topics and<br />

pathways in the theory and practice of human rights,<br />

this volume will be an invaluable aid to those seeking to<br />

understand the complex meanings, institutions, and<br />

practices of human rights.<br />

2009: 234 x 156: 216pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-48615-6: $173.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415486156<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Security Governance, Policing,<br />

and Local Capacity<br />

Clifford D. Shearing University of Cape Town,<br />

South Africa and Jan Froestad, University of Bergen,<br />

Norway<br />

Series: Advances in Police Theory and Practice<br />

July 2012: 235 x 156: 200pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-4200-9014-7: $139.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781420090147<br />

Security and Everyday Life<br />

Edited by Vida Bajc, University of Pennsylvania, USA<br />

and Willem de Lint, Flinders University, Australia<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> Advances in Criminology<br />

This volume offers case studies from multiple countries<br />

that show how our private and public life is shaped by<br />

the security meta-frame and surveillance. It is essential<br />

reading for everyone who is interested in the changes to<br />

be faced in social life, privacy, and human freedoms<br />

during this age of security and surveillance.<br />

2010: 229 x 152: 322pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-99768-3: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

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Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website


NEW<br />

Human Trafficking<br />

Exploring the International Nature,<br />

Concerns, and Complexities<br />

Edited by John Winterdyk, Mount Royal University,<br />

Canada, Benjamin Perrin, University of British<br />

Columbia, Canada and Philip Reichel, University of<br />

Northern Colorado, USA<br />

Edited by three global experts<br />

and composed of the work of<br />

an esteemed panel of<br />

contributors, Human Trafficking:<br />

Exploring the International<br />

Nature, Concerns, and<br />

Complexities examines<br />

techniques used to protect and<br />

support victims of trafficking as<br />

well as strategies for<br />

prosecution of offenders.<br />

Topics discussed include:<br />

• how data on human trafficking should be collected<br />

and analyzed, and how data collection can be<br />

improved through proper contextualization<br />

• the importance of harmonization and consistency in<br />

legal definitions and interpretations within and among<br />

regions<br />

• the need for increased exchange of information and<br />

cooperation between the various actors involved in<br />

combating human trafficking, including investigators,<br />

law enforcement and criminal justice professionals, and<br />

social workers<br />

• problems with victim identification, as well as<br />

erroneous assumptions of the scope of victimization<br />

• controversy over linking protection measures with<br />

cooperation with authorities.<br />

Highlighting the issues most addressed by contemporary<br />

scholars, researchers, practitioners, and policy-makers,<br />

this volume also suggests areas ripe for further inquiry<br />

and investigation. Supplemented by discussion questions<br />

in each chapter, the book is sure to stimulate debate on<br />

a troubling phenomenon.<br />

December 2011: 254 x 178: 318pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-4398-2036-0: $99.95<br />

eBook: 978-1-4398-8452-2<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781439820360<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Offender Rehabilitation and<br />

Therapeutic Communities<br />

Instituting Change ‘the TC way’<br />

Alisa Stevens, University of Kent, UK<br />

Series: International Series on Desistance and<br />

Rehabilitation<br />

Drawing upon original qualitative research with prisoners<br />

in three democratic therapeutic communities (TCs), this<br />

book provides a unique sociological portrayal and new<br />

criminological understanding of the TC’s rehabilitative<br />

regime and culture.<br />

September 2012: 234 x 156: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67018-0: $130.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

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CRIME AND SOCIETY BACKLIST<br />

TITLE AUTHOR(S)/EDITOR(S) PUB<br />

DATE<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

CRIME AND SOCIETY<br />

ISBN BINDING PRICE<br />

USD<br />

Crime and Inequality Chris Grover 2010 978-1-84392-329-9 Paperback $40.95<br />

Criminal Behaviour in<br />

Context<br />

Nick Flynn 2010 978-1-84392-811-9 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-812-6 e-Book<br />

Flashback Jennifer Ward 2010 978-1-84392-791-4 Hardback $125.00<br />

Global Environmental<br />

Harm<br />

Hearing the Victim Edited by Anthony<br />

Bottoms and Julian<br />

Roberts<br />

The Dynamics of<br />

Desistance<br />

978-1-84392-792-1 e-Book<br />

Edited by Rob White 2010 978-1-84392-796-9 Paperback $44.95<br />

978-1-84392-797-6 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-798-3 e-Book<br />

2010 978-1-84392-272-8 Hardback $125.00<br />

Deirdre Healy 2010 978-1-84392-970-3 e-Book<br />

978-1-84392-783-9 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-784-6 e-Book<br />

Victims and Policy-Making Matthew Hall 2010 978-1-84392-824-9 Paperback $44.95<br />

978-1-84392-825-6 Hardback $128.00<br />

978-0-203-81030-9 e-Book<br />

Crime and Media Edited by Chris Greer 2009 978-0-415-42239-0 Paperback $66.95<br />

978-0-415-42238-3 Hardback $188.00<br />

Environmental Crime Edited by Rob White 2009 978-1-84392-512-5 Paperback $49.95<br />

978-1-84392-511-8 Hardback $129.95<br />

Families Shamed Rachel Condry 2009 978-1-84392-501-9 Paperback $40.95<br />

How Offenders Transform<br />

Their Lives<br />

Understanding Criminal<br />

Careers<br />

Crime, Justice and the<br />

Media<br />

Edited by Bonita Veysey,<br />

Johnna Christian and<br />

Damian J. Martinez<br />

Keith Soothill, Claire<br />

Fitzpatrick and Brian<br />

Francis<br />

Ian Marsh and Gaynor<br />

Melville<br />

978-1-84392-606-1 e-Book<br />

2009 978-1-84392-508-8 Paperback $39.95<br />

978-1-84392-509-5 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-731-0 e-Book<br />

2009 978-1-84392-502-6 Paperback $40.95<br />

978-1-84392-503-3 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-710-5 e-Book<br />

2008 978-0-415-44490-3 Paperback $51.95<br />

978-0-415-44489-7 Hardback $150.00<br />

978-0-203-89478-1 e-Book<br />

Families in Today's World David Cheal 2008 978-0-415-35930-6 Paperback $47.95<br />

Playing the Identity Card Edited by Colin J. Bennett<br />

and David Lyon<br />

Power, Conflict and<br />

Criminalisation<br />

Rehabilitation Tony Ward and Shadd<br />

Maruna<br />

Consumption and<br />

Everyday Life<br />

978-0-415-35931-3 Hardback $165.00<br />

978-0-203-00721-1 e-Book<br />

2008 978-0-415-46564-9 Paperback $43.95<br />

978-0-415-46563-2 Hardback $179.00<br />

978-0-203-92713-7 e-Book<br />

Phil Scraton 2007 978-0-415-42241-3 Paperback $59.95<br />

978-0-415-42240-6 Hardback $165.00<br />

978-0-203-93553-8 e-Book<br />

2007 978-0-415-38643-2 Paperback $41.95<br />

978-0-415-38642-5 Hardback $155.00<br />

978-0-203-96217-6 e-Book<br />

Mark Paterson 2005 978-0-415-35507-0 Paperback $49.95<br />

978-0-415-35506-3 Hardback $175.00<br />

978-0-203-00176-9 e-Book<br />

21


22<br />

SOCIAL POLICY<br />

SOCIAL POLICY<br />

Prison Policy in Ireland<br />

Politics, Penal-Welfarism and Political<br />

Imprisonment<br />

Mary Rogan, Dublin Institute of Technology, Ireland<br />

This book explores how Irish<br />

prison policy has come to take<br />

on its particular character, with<br />

comparatively low prison<br />

numbers, significant reliance on<br />

short sentences and a<br />

policy-making climate in which<br />

long periods of neglect are<br />

interspersed with bursts of<br />

political activity all prominent<br />

features. Drawing on the<br />

emerging scholarship of policy<br />

analysis, the book argues that it<br />

is only through close attention to the way in which<br />

policy is formed that we will fully understand the nature<br />

of prison policy.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Understanding Prison Policy: The<br />

Sociology of Punishment and Policy-Making 2. Prison Policy<br />

in Ireland from Independence to ‘The Emergency’ – Civil War<br />

and Conservative Administration 3. Prison Policy ‘the<br />

Emergency’: the Recurring Effects of Subversion and<br />

Stagnation 4. Prison Policy during the 1950s: Low Numbers<br />

and Limited Interest 5. Prison Policy during the 1960s: ‘Solo<br />

Runs’ and Social Change 6. Prison Policy in the 1970s:<br />

Subversion, Suspicion and Tension 7. Prison Policy during the<br />

1980s 8. Prison Policy during the 1990s: The Crucial Decade<br />

9. Prison Policy since 2000 and Beyond 10. Conclusion:<br />

Unravelling the Nature of Irish Prison Policy<br />

March 2011: 234 x 156: 264pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-61618-8: $135.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-61619-5: $51.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415616195<br />

Sentencing and the Legitimacy<br />

of Trial Justice<br />

Ralph Henham, Nottingham Trent University, UK<br />

This book discusses the<br />

under-researched relationship<br />

between sentencing and the<br />

legitimacy of punishment,<br />

arguing that there is an<br />

increasing gap between what is<br />

perceived as legitimate<br />

punishment and the sentencing<br />

decisions of the criminal courts.<br />

Selected Contents: Introduction<br />

1. Challenging Existing Paradigms<br />

2. Issues of Theory and Method<br />

3. Punishment Rationales in a<br />

Comparative Context 4. Discretionary Power and Sentencing<br />

5. Procedural Justice and Due Process 6. Victimisation and<br />

Sentencing 7. Deconstructing Evidence for Sentencing<br />

8. Access to Justice, Rights and Accountability<br />

9. Punishment and Sentencing as Governance<br />

August 2011: 234 x 156: 368pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67141-5: $138.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415671415<br />

The Registration and<br />

Monitoring of Sex Offenders<br />

A Comparative Study<br />

Terry Thomas, Leeds Metropolitan University, UK<br />

This book seeks to provide the<br />

first serious and detailed<br />

narrative of the conception and<br />

implementation of the sex<br />

offender registers. It seeks to do<br />

so in a clear and easy to follow<br />

text that will be both informed<br />

and critical. It will also serve as a<br />

resource book for those<br />

wanting to make further study<br />

of the process of registration<br />

and monitoring.<br />

Selected Contents:<br />

1. Introduction 2. Registers – A source of ‘Tyranny and<br />

Intimidation’? 3. Twentieth Century Registration of the<br />

Deviant, the Dangerous and the Offender 4. Sex offender<br />

registers in the United States of America 5. The UK sex<br />

offender register 6. Registers around the World 7. Sex<br />

Offender Registers in Progress and Cross Border Monitoring<br />

8. Community Notification and Residence Restrictions<br />

9. Making Sense of Sex Offender Registers<br />

10. Conclusions<br />

June 2011: 234 x 156: 200pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-66783-8: $130.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-66781-4: $47.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415667814<br />

Restorative Justice in Practice<br />

Evaluating What Works for Victims and<br />

Offenders<br />

Joanna Shapland, Gwen Robinson and Angela<br />

Sorsby all at University of Sheffield, UK<br />

This book analyzes the<br />

practicalities of setting up and<br />

running restorative justice<br />

schemes, the costs involved and<br />

the key professional and ethical<br />

issues involved such as victims’<br />

and offenders’ needs and<br />

expectations, community and<br />

desistance.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Setting the<br />

Scene 2. Setting the Schemes in<br />

Context: A Review of the Aims,<br />

Histories and Results of Restorative<br />

Justice 3. Setting Up and Running Restorative Justice<br />

Schemes 4. Accountability, Regulation and Risk<br />

Experiencing Restorative Justice 5. Approaching<br />

Restorative Justice 6. Through a Different Lens: Examining<br />

Restorative Justice Using Case Studies 7. During Restorative<br />

Justice Events Looking Back at Restorative Justice: What<br />

Do People Think it Achieved? 8. The Victims’ View:<br />

Satisfaction and Closure 9. Outcome Agreements and their<br />

Progress 10. The Offenders’ View: Reoffending and the<br />

Road to Desistance 11. Restorative Justice: Lessons from<br />

Practice<br />

May 2011: 234 x 156: 240pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-846-1: $94.95<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-845-4: $44.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843928454<br />

2nd Edition<br />

Restorative Justice<br />

Ideas, Values, Debates<br />

Gerry Johnstone, University of Hull, UK<br />

First published in 2002,<br />

Restorative Justice: Ideas,<br />

Values, Debates is renowned<br />

worldwide as an accessible,<br />

balanced and invaluable analysis<br />

of the argument that restorative<br />

justice can provide an attractive<br />

alternative to traditional<br />

responses to crime.<br />

The second edition includes a<br />

new chapter identifying and<br />

analyzing fundamental shifts<br />

and developments in restorative<br />

justice thinking over the last decade. It suggests that the<br />

campaign for restorative justice has not only grown<br />

rapidly in the last decade, but has also changed in its<br />

focus and character. What started as a campaign to<br />

revolutionize criminal justice has evolved into a social<br />

movement that aspires to implant restorative values into<br />

the fabric of everyday life. This new edition explores the<br />

implications of this development for restorative justice’s<br />

claim to provide a feasible and desirable alternative to<br />

mainstream thinking on matters of crime and justice.<br />

This book provides an essential introduction to the most<br />

fundamental and distinctive ideas of restorative justice<br />

and will appeal to students of criminology, law or related<br />

disciplines or researchers and professionals with an<br />

interest in crime and justice issues. In addition it extends<br />

the debate about the meaning of restorative justice<br />

– pros, cons and wider significance – hence it will also<br />

be of interest to those already familiar with the topic.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Central Themes and<br />

Critical Issues 3. Reviving Restorative Justice Traditions 4.<br />

Healing the Victim 5. A Restorative Approach to Offenders<br />

6. Shame, Apology and Forgiveness 7. Mediation,<br />

Participation and the Role of Community 8. The Future of<br />

Restorative Justice 9. The Changing Character of Restorative<br />

Justice<br />

September 2011: 234 x 156: 200pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67265-8: $155.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-67264-1: $44.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415672641<br />

Victims and Policy-Making<br />

A Comparative Perspective<br />

Matthew Hall, University of Sheffield, UK<br />

2010: 234 x 156: 296pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-825-6: $128.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-824-9: $44.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843928249<br />

This volume sets out to contrast<br />

and compare the development<br />

of policies related to victims of<br />

crime and their place within the<br />

criminal justice systems in nine<br />

separate jurisdictions (the USA,<br />

the Netherlands, England and<br />

Wales, Scotland, the Republic of<br />

Ireland, Australia, New Zealand,<br />

Canada and South Africa).<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website


FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Ethnography and the City<br />

Readings on Doing Urban Fieldwork<br />

Edited by Richard Ocejo, John Jay College, City<br />

University of New York, USA<br />

Series: The Metropolis and Modern Life<br />

Ethnography has been a big part of sociology in the<br />

United States since the discipline’s inception. Many<br />

sociologists in the late nineteenth and early twentieth<br />

centuries, such as from the famous University of<br />

Chicago, used ethnography to explore their favorite<br />

topic-the problems and mysteries of cities and urban life,<br />

especially among immigrants and the poor-and<br />

understand modern society’s impact on social order and<br />

community. They established a vibrant practice, outlined<br />

a line of inquiry, and laid the intellectual foundation for<br />

generations of sociologists around the country and the<br />

world to build upon. Today urban ethnographers<br />

continue to produce excellent and popular research on a<br />

wide range of topics. In spite of this legacy and<br />

contemporary interest in urban ethnography, there has<br />

yet to be a single volume that collects some of the best<br />

work from this discipline’s corpus to show how<br />

ethnographers do ethnography in the city. This reader,<br />

Exploring the City, aims to fill this important gap and<br />

make a significant contribution to the discipline itself.<br />

August 2012: 235 x 156: 320pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-80837-8: $160.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-80838-5: $49.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415808385<br />

NEW<br />

How Ethical Systems Change:<br />

Lynching and Capital<br />

Punishment<br />

Sheldon Ekland-Olson, University of Texas at<br />

Austin, USA and Danielle Dirks, Occidental College,<br />

USA<br />

Series: Framing 21st Century Social Issues<br />

Slavery, lynching and capital<br />

punishment were interwoven in<br />

the United States and by the<br />

mid-twentieth century these<br />

connections gave rise to a small<br />

but well-focused reform<br />

movement. Biased and<br />

perfunctory procedures were<br />

replaced by prolonged trials and<br />

appeals, which some found<br />

messy and meaningless; DNA<br />

profiling clearly established<br />

innocent persons had been<br />

sentenced to death. The debate over taking life to<br />

protect life continues; this book is based on a hugely<br />

popular undergraduate course taught at the University<br />

of Texas, and is ideal for those interested in criminal<br />

justice, social problems, social inequality, and social<br />

movements.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. What Lies Ahead 2. Removing the<br />

Protective Boundaries of Life 3. A Campaign to Stop<br />

Executions 4. The Pendulum Swings, the Debate Continues<br />

December 2011: 254 x 178: 80pp<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-50519-2: $9.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-12784-1<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415505192<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

The Politics of Organized Crime<br />

Theory and Practice<br />

Sappho Xenakis, London School of Economics, UK<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> Transnational Crime and Corruption<br />

Organized crime has become one of most prominent<br />

international security concerns of our age. Nevertheless,<br />

international efforts to combat it have often been<br />

criticized as inadequate, ineffective and illiberal.<br />

Combining insights from International Relations and<br />

Criminology, this book explains policy against organized<br />

crime as a potent means by which state cohesiveness<br />

and the authority of state elites are strengthened, a<br />

means valid as much for stronger as for weaker states,<br />

internationally and domestically.<br />

Selected Contents: Introduction Part 1: Comparing<br />

Organized Crime Groups Internationally: What (or Who) is<br />

Organized Crime? Part 2: Scientism and the International<br />

Effort to Combat Organized Crime Part 3: The Logic of<br />

Threat Assessments A. Human Security B. Threats to the<br />

State Part 4: Born Rivals? Organized Crime and the State<br />

Part 5: The Political Function of the International Organized<br />

Crime Agenda: A Two-level Game Part 6: Resistance to<br />

Policy against Organized Crime. Conclusion<br />

June 2012: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-49543-1: $135.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415495431<br />

Contemporary Anarchist<br />

Studies<br />

An Introductory Anthology of Anarchy in<br />

the Academy<br />

Edited by Randall Amster, Abraham DeLeon,<br />

Luis Fernandez, Anthony J. Nocella, II and<br />

Deric Shannon<br />

2009: 234 x 156: 336pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-47401-6: $160.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-47402-3: $51.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415474023<br />

4 Volume Set<br />

Surveillance<br />

Edited by Benjamin Goold<br />

This book highlights the recent<br />

rise in interest in anarchist<br />

theory and practice attempting<br />

to bridge the gap between<br />

anarchist activism on the streets<br />

and anarchist studies in the<br />

academia. Bringing together<br />

some of the most prominent<br />

voices in contemporary<br />

anarchism in the academy, it<br />

includes pieces written on<br />

anarchist theory, pedagogy,<br />

methodologies, praxis, and the<br />

future.<br />

Series: Critical Concepts in Criminology<br />

2008: 234 x 156: 1640pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-45819-1: $1430.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415458191<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

SOCIAL POLICY<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> International<br />

Handbook of Social Justice<br />

Edited by Michael Reisch and Jayshree Jani, both<br />

at University of Maryland, USA<br />

This authoritative volume explores what social justice<br />

really means and what its attainment would involve.<br />

With contributions from leading scholars around the<br />

globe, Reisch and Jani have put together a magisterial,<br />

interdisciplinary overview of social justice.<br />

Selected Contents: Introduction Part 1: Historical<br />

Definitions of Social Justice Part 2: Theories and Conceptual<br />

Frameworks Part 3: Issues in Policy and Practice Part 4:<br />

Cultural Reflections on Social Justice<br />

September 2012: 246 x 174: 432pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-62043-7: $200.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415620437<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

The Subject of Prostitution<br />

Sex/Work, Law and Social Theory<br />

Jane Scoular, University of Strathclyde, UK<br />

The Subject of Prostitution offers a distinctive analysis of<br />

the links between prostitution and social theory in order<br />

to advance a critical analysis of the relationship of law to<br />

sex/work.<br />

Using the lens of social theory to disrupt fixed meanings<br />

the book provides an advanced analytical framework<br />

through which to understand the complexity and<br />

contingencies of sex/work in late-modernity. The book<br />

analyzes contemporary citizenship discourse and the<br />

law’s ability to meet the competing demands of<br />

empowerment by sexworkers and protection by radical<br />

feminists who view prostitution as the epitome of<br />

patriarchal sexual and economic relations. Its central<br />

focus is the role of law in both structuring and<br />

responding to the ‘problem of prostitution’. This is<br />

particularly pertinent in a period of unprecedented legal<br />

reform, both internationally and nationally, as legal<br />

norms simultaneously attempt to protect, empower and<br />

criminalize parties involved in the purchase of sexual<br />

services.<br />

The Subject of Prostitution aims to provide an advanced<br />

theoretical resource for policy-makers, researchers and<br />

activists involved in contemporary struggles over the<br />

meanings and place of sex/work in late modernity.<br />

June 2012: 234 x 156: 240pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-904385-51-6: $49.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781904385516<br />

23


24<br />

SOCIAL POLICY<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

The Right to Silence<br />

Principle, Pragmatism and Policy Making<br />

Hannah Quirk, University of Manchester, UK<br />

Within an international context in which the right to<br />

silence has long been regarded as sacrosanct, this book<br />

provides the first comprehensive, empirically-based<br />

analysis of the effects of curtailing the right to silence.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: Principles versus Pragmatism<br />

A ‘Benchmark of Justice?’ A Crime Control Target Part 2:<br />

The Right to Silence in Practice The Criminal Justice and<br />

Public Order Act 1994. The Right to Silence and Cop<br />

Culture. The Right to Silence and the Realities of Legal<br />

Representation. The Right to Silence and the Courts Part 3:<br />

Policy Making Criminal Justice and ‘Common Sense’ Policy<br />

Making. Conclusions: The Right to Silence: Why the<br />

Debate must Continue<br />

September 2012: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-54771-0: $120.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415547710<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Public Sex and the Law<br />

Silent Desire<br />

Chris Ashford, University of Sunderland, UK<br />

Public Sex and the Law: Silent Desire examines the<br />

current legal status and regulation of public sex. Legal<br />

reform of sexuality appears to have focused upon the<br />

lesbian, gay and bisexual communities. But whilst ‘gay’<br />

sexual acts and identities have seen a raft of legal reform<br />

and international debate – most notably in North<br />

America – sexuality activists have been reluctant to<br />

defend public sex, let alone campaign for legal reform.<br />

The men and women who engage in public sex and<br />

their expression of desire remains silent not only in the<br />

somatic encounters that take place, but also within the<br />

policy making process. This book draws upon original<br />

and multi-disciplinary research into the operation of the<br />

‘public sex community’ to highlight the unacknowledged<br />

battle being waged between the law enforcement and<br />

the cruising, cottaging and dogging communities.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: The Sexuality Landscape<br />

1. Sexuality, Policy and the Law 2. Theorising Public Sex<br />

Part 2: Policing Public Sex 3. Entering the Cottage 4. The<br />

Cruising Ground 5. The Dogging Phenomenon<br />

6. Technology and Public Sex Part 3: Commercial Sex and<br />

the Public Sex Nexus 7. International Approaches to<br />

Commercial Space 8. Sex Work and the Street Part 4: The<br />

Future of Public Sex 9. A New Approach?<br />

June 2012: 234 x 156: 240pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-55287-5: $120.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415552875<br />

RELATED<br />

JOURNALS<br />

Policy studies<br />

Editor: Mark Evans - Director,<br />

ANZSOG Institute for Governance,<br />

Canberra, Australia<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/cpos<br />

European Societies<br />

Editor: Goran Therborn – (Emeritus)<br />

University of Cambridge, UK<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/reus<br />

POLICING AND<br />

CRIME CONTROL<br />

NEW<br />

3rd Edition<br />

Changing Police Theories<br />

For 21st Century Societies<br />

Charles Edwards<br />

‘Changing Policing Theories by Charles Edwards is<br />

an excellent text book for the budding police<br />

officer who in New South Wales, and very soon in<br />

Victoria, needs to navigate the undulating<br />

landscape of university level study to become a<br />

confirmed police officer. [The book contains] a<br />

great deal of information and intellectual<br />

stimulation.’ – NSW Police News, Vol 85 No 9,<br />

September 2005<br />

This book is a thoroughly revised edition of the book<br />

previously published in 1999 and 2005, and discusses<br />

the history and philosophy of policing. It is also a<br />

comparative study of the practice of policing in Australia,<br />

Britain and the USA.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: The Social and Historical<br />

Contexts of Policing 1. The Triangle of Tension 2. The<br />

History of Policing 3. Crime – A Police Problem or a Social<br />

Problem? 4. Policing Responses to Social change – 1960s to<br />

1990s Part 2: Society and Crime in the 21st Century<br />

5. Society and crime in the 21st Century 6. Current Police<br />

Responses to Crime and Disorder 6. Problems of Policing the<br />

Streets 7. Ethics, Discipline, and the Behaviour of Individual<br />

Officers Part 3: Accountability 8. Control, Independence<br />

and Accountability in Policing 9. Police Accountability in<br />

Australia 10. Police Accountability in Britain 11. Police<br />

Accountability in United States Part 4: Policing in the 21st<br />

Century 12. Policing and the State 13. Changing in Crime<br />

in a Changing World 14. Towards the Bicentenary of Policing<br />

October 2011: 234 x 156: 370pp<br />

Pb: 978-1-86287-827-3: $90.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781862878273<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Police Cultures<br />

Themes and Concepts<br />

Tom Cockroft, Canterbury Christ Church University,<br />

UK<br />

This book brings together knowledge, debates and<br />

themes of police culture in one highly accessible<br />

resource to provide an overview of the key literature of<br />

the area.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. What is Police<br />

Culture? 3. Police Culture: Traditional Approaches 4. Police<br />

Culture: Contemporary Approaches 5. Making Sense of<br />

Police Culture Research 6. Managing Police Culture<br />

7. Conclusion<br />

October 2012: 234 x 156: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-50257-3: $130.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-50259-7: $47.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415502597<br />

BESTSELLER<br />

2nd Edition<br />

Handbook of Policing<br />

Edited by Tim Newburn<br />

‘A major contribution to the<br />

study of policing in the UK ...<br />

authoritative, interesting<br />

and extremely wide<br />

ranging.’ – Sir Ian Blair, Former<br />

Commissioner, Metropolitan<br />

Police<br />

Like the original Handbook of<br />

Policing, this second edition<br />

combines the expertise of<br />

academics and policing<br />

practitioners to create an<br />

essential reference book for<br />

students and practitioners alike. It also now includes a<br />

completely new chapter on policing and forensics.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction: Understanding Policing<br />

Part 1: Policing in Comparative and Historical<br />

Perspective 2. Models of Policing 3. Policing Before the<br />

Police 4. The Birth and Development of the Police<br />

5. Policing Since 1945 Part 2: The Context of Policing<br />

6. The Pattern of Transnational Policing 7. Plural Policing in<br />

the UK: Policing Beyond the Police 8. Policing in Scotland<br />

9. The Police service of Northern Ireland 10. The Police<br />

Organisation 11. Police Cultures 12. Police Powers<br />

13. Policing and the Media, Robert Reiner Part 3: Doing<br />

Policing 14. Crime Reduction and Community Safety<br />

15. Modern Approaches to Policing: Community,<br />

Problem-Oriented and Intelligence-Led 16. ‘Interpretation<br />

for Action?’ Definitions and Potential of Crime Analysis for<br />

Policing 17. Criminal Investigation and Crime Control<br />

18. Police Use of Force, Firearms and Riot Control 19. Drugs<br />

Policing 20. Policing Fraud and Organized Crime<br />

21. Policing Terror 22. Policing Cybercrime: Emerging Trends<br />

and Future Challenges Part 4: Themes and Debates in<br />

Policing 23. Policing Ethnic Minority Communities<br />

24. Gender and Policing 25. Policing and Ethics 26. The<br />

Accountability of Policing 27. Leadership and Performance<br />

Management 28. Policing and Forensic Science<br />

29. Restorative Justice, Victims and the Police 30. Future of<br />

Policing<br />

2008: 246 x 174: 864pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-500-2: $129.95<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-323-7: $70.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843923237<br />

BESTSELLER<br />

Handbook of Crime Prevention<br />

and Community Safety<br />

Edited by Nick Tilley<br />

2005: 246 x 174: 816pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-147-9: $129.95<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-146-2: $64.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843921462<br />

The book provides a detailed<br />

overview of the main theories<br />

and perspectives informing<br />

crime prevention policy and<br />

practice. It is a comprehensive<br />

introduction to the background,<br />

theory and practice of crime<br />

prevention and community<br />

safety.<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website


Intelligence and Intelligence<br />

Analysis<br />

Patrick F. Walsh, Charles Sturt University, Australia<br />

• understanding structures<br />

• developing a discipline.<br />

This book tracks post 9/11<br />

developments in national<br />

security and policing intelligence<br />

and their relevance to new<br />

emerging areas of intelligence<br />

practice such as: corrections,<br />

biosecurity, private industry and<br />

regulatory environments.<br />

Developments are explored<br />

thematically across three broad<br />

sections:<br />

• applying intelligence<br />

Issues explored include: understanding intelligence<br />

models; the strategic management challenges of<br />

intelligence; intelligence capacity building; and the<br />

ethical dimensions of intelligence practice. Using case<br />

studies collected from wide-ranging interviews with<br />

leaders, managers and intelligence practitioners from a<br />

range of practice areas in Australia, Canada, New<br />

Zealand, the UK and US, the book indentifies examples<br />

of good practice across countries and agencies that may<br />

be relevant to other settings.<br />

Uniquely bringing together significant theoretical and<br />

practical developments in a sample of traditional and<br />

emerging areas of intelligence, this book provides<br />

readers with a more holistic and inter-disciplinary<br />

perspective on the evolving intelligence field across<br />

several different practice contexts.<br />

Intelligence and Intelligence Analysis will be relevant to a<br />

broad audience including intelligence practitioners and<br />

managers working across all fields of intelligence<br />

(national security, policing, private industry and<br />

emerging areas) as well as students taking courses in<br />

policing and intelligence analysis.<br />

Selected Contents: Foreword. Preface Part 1: Applying<br />

Intelligence 1. Introduction 2. Traditional Intelligence<br />

Practice 3. Emerging Intelligence Practice Areas 4.<br />

Intelligence and Capacity Building Part 2: Understanding<br />

Structures 5. Intelligence Models and Frameworks 6.<br />

Building Better Intelligence Frameworks 7. Intelligence<br />

Leadership and Management Part 3: Developing a<br />

Discipline 8. Ethics and Legislation 9. Analytical<br />

Innovations 10. Intelligence Education and Professionalism<br />

11. Research and Theory Building 12. Conclusion.<br />

References. Index<br />

June 2011: 234 x 156: 352pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-738-9: $128.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-739-6: $54.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843927396<br />

BESTSELLER<br />

Intelligence-Led Policing<br />

Jerry H. Ratcliffe<br />

This book – the first of its kind<br />

– brings the concepts, processes<br />

and practice of intelligence-led<br />

policing into focus, so that<br />

students, practitioners and<br />

scholars of policing, criminal<br />

intelligence and crime analysis<br />

can better understand the<br />

evolving theoretical and<br />

empirical dynamics of this<br />

rapidly growing paradigm.<br />

Selected Contents:<br />

1. Introduction: Reimagining<br />

Policing – What is Intelligence-Led Policing? 2. Origins of<br />

Intelligence-Led Policing 3. The Magnitude of the Crime<br />

Challenge 4. Defining Intelligence-led Policing 5. Analytical<br />

Frameworks 6. Interpreting the Criminal environment<br />

7. Influencing Decision-Makers 8. Having an Impact on<br />

Crime 9. Evaluating Intelligence-Led Policing 10. Challenges<br />

for the Future<br />

2008: 246 x 174: 288pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-340-4: $125.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-339-8: $42.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843923398<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Just Authority?<br />

Trust in the Police in England and Wales<br />

Jonathan Jackson, London School of Economics,<br />

UK, Ben Bradford, University of Edinburgh, UK,<br />

Betsy Stanko, Metropolitan Police Service, UK and<br />

Katrin Hohl, London School of Economics, UK<br />

Just Authority? provides the most authoritative and<br />

comprehensive analysis thus far of the meaning,<br />

distribution and significance of trust in the police and<br />

the legitimacy of legal authorities.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: Introduction 1. The<br />

Contribution of this Book 2. What is Trust in the Police and<br />

Police Legitimacy? 3. The Policy Context of Trust and<br />

Legitimacy Part 2: Historical Trends in Public Confidence<br />

in Policing 4. Convergence not Divergence: Public Contact<br />

and Confidence in Twenty Years of the British Crime Survey<br />

5. Ethnicity and Confidence in Policing: Historical Trajectories<br />

Part 3: New Measures of Trust in the Police 6. The<br />

Meaning and Measurement of Trust in the Police 7. Which<br />

Social Groups are most Trusting of the Police? Part 4:<br />

Explaining Trust in the Police 8. Contact with the Police:<br />

Are Personal Encounters with the Police Important? 9. The<br />

Role of the Mass Media in Public Trust in the Police 10.<br />

Neighbourhood: Does it Matter where One Lives? 11.<br />

Relational Concerns and the Fear of Crime 12. Ideology and<br />

Sensitivity to Disorder Part 5: Trust in Justice and the<br />

Legitimacy of Legal Authorities 13. The Meaning and<br />

Measurement of Police Legitimacy 14. Compliance,<br />

Legitimacy and the Procedural Justice Model 15. Does the<br />

Procedural Justice Model Apply across Majority and Minority<br />

Groups? Part 6: Conclusions 16. Recap of the Findings<br />

17. Reflections on our Experience Translating the Research<br />

Findings to the Metropolitan Police Service<br />

July 2012: 234 x 156: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-848-5: $79.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843928485<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

POLICING AND CRIME CONTROL<br />

Police Custody<br />

Governance, Legitimacy and Reform in the<br />

Criminal Justice Process<br />

Layla Skinns, University of Sheffield, UK<br />

Police custody acts as an<br />

important gateway to the<br />

criminal justice process. Much is<br />

at stake here for both staff and<br />

suspects as what happens in<br />

police custody can have<br />

important consequences further<br />

down the line. This book offers a<br />

timely contribution to research<br />

on police custody, which has<br />

been largely neglected for the<br />

last decade, and it is the first to<br />

examine the growing role given<br />

to civilians employed by the police or by private security<br />

companies within police custody areas.<br />

The book draws on a mixed-method study of two<br />

custody areas, one publicly-run, and the other largely<br />

privately-run. This empirical analysis explores anew<br />

suspects’ experiences of police custody from arrest to<br />

charge, including their access to due process rights such<br />

as phone calls, legal advice and detention reviews, as<br />

well as shedding light on the hitherto unexplored<br />

working relationships between the police, civilian police<br />

staff (public and private), legal advisers, doctors,<br />

appropriate adults and drug workers.<br />

These findings on the police custody process are used to<br />

examine pertinent socio-legal and theoretical matters<br />

connected to due process, the role of the police in<br />

policing, as well as procedural justice and legitimacy.<br />

The book integrates issues which are topical and of<br />

utmost empirical, theoretical and political significance,<br />

meaning that it is likely to have a broad appeal to<br />

students, academics, practitioners and policy-makers<br />

with an interest in the criminal justice process, policing<br />

and the sociology of law.<br />

Selected Contents: Foreword 1. Introduction<br />

2. Governance and Legitimacy in Multi-Professional Police<br />

Custody Areas 3. Cops, Docs, DPs and Others: Staff and<br />

Suspects in the Custody Process 4. ‘Down the Block’: The<br />

Custody Environment for Staff and Suspects 5. Access to<br />

Rights and Entitlements at the Police Station 6. Plural<br />

Policing and the Police Custody Process 7. Multi-<br />

Professionalism and the Police Custody Process<br />

8. Governance and Legitimacy Re-Visited 9. The Future of<br />

Police Custody<br />

2010: 234 x 156: 272pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-813-3: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843928133<br />

25


26<br />

POLICING AND CRIME CONTROL<br />

Police Interviewing<br />

Styles and Tactics<br />

Stephen Moston, James Cook University, Australia<br />

This book aims to describe and critically evaluate a wide<br />

range of police interviewing styles and tactics that might<br />

be used during the questioning of suspects in criminal<br />

investigations, in terms of their efficacy and acceptability.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: Confessions 1. Why Do<br />

Suspects Confess? 2. Approaches to Interviewing 3. Denials<br />

4. Silence Part 2: Interviewing Styles and Tactics<br />

5. Interviewing Styles 6. Questioning the Suspect 7. Rapport<br />

Building 8. Confession Oriented Tactics 9. Preventing<br />

Denials 10. Challenging the Suspect’s Version of Events<br />

11. Manipulating the Suspect’s Perception of the Offence<br />

Part 3: Training and Research 12. Do Tactics Work?<br />

13. Training in Interviewing 14. A Research Agenda<br />

December 2011: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-521-7: $84.95<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-522-4: $39.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843925224<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Policing Sex<br />

Edited by Paul Johnson, University of Surrey, UK<br />

and Derek Dalton, Flinders University, Australia<br />

This book brings together a<br />

group of respected academics<br />

to explore the role of the police<br />

in the regulation of consensual,<br />

sexual practices and in shaping<br />

the boundaries of that aspect of<br />

contemporary life that we<br />

imagine to be most private.<br />

Selected Contents: Introduction<br />

Paul Johnson and Derek Dalton<br />

Part 1: The Contemporary<br />

Landscape of Policing Sexuality<br />

1. The Changing Landscape of<br />

Policing Male Sexualities: A Minor Revolution? Leslie J.<br />

Moran 2. The Enforcers of Morality? Paul Johnson Part 2:<br />

Policing ‘Public’ Sex 3. Heterosexuality Public Places and<br />

Policing Chris Ashford 4. Sex and Sexuality Under<br />

Surveillance: Lenses and Binary Frames Kevin Walby and<br />

André Smith 5. Policing ‘Beats’ in Australia Derek Dalton<br />

Part 3: Policing ‘Pornography’ 6. Pornography Policing<br />

and Censorship Murray Perkins 7. Policing Obscenity Dave<br />

McDonald 8. Sexting Intimacy and Criminal Acts: Translating<br />

Teenage Sextualities Jo Moran-Ellis Part 4: Policing And<br />

The ‘Sex Industry’ 9. Policing Commercial ‘Sex Work’ in<br />

the UK Teela Sanders 10. The ‘Problem of Tabletop Dancing’<br />

Antonia Quadara 11. Regulating Adult Work in Canada: The<br />

Role of Criminal and Municipal Code Mary Laing<br />

May 2012: 234 x 156: 232pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-66805-7: $155.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-66806-4: $51.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415668064<br />

Police Work<br />

Principles and Practice<br />

Colin Rogers, Rhobert Lewis, Tim John and<br />

Tim Read, all at University of Glamorgan, UK<br />

This book provides a highly<br />

readable account of police<br />

work. It builds upon<br />

Introduction to Police Work<br />

(Rogers and Lewis 2007) to<br />

provide a comprehensive, in<br />

depth and critical understanding<br />

of policing in today’s diverse<br />

society.<br />

Police Work: Principles and<br />

Practice meets the need for an<br />

increasingly sophisticated and<br />

professional approach to<br />

training within the police, whether this is carried out<br />

within police forces themselves or within higher<br />

education institutions. Written in an accessible style by<br />

current and former police practitioners and a nationally<br />

recognized expert on the National Intelligence Model,<br />

this book focuses – in line with the government’s agenda<br />

for workforce modernization – on three key areas of<br />

policing: community, investigation and intelligence. It<br />

introduces readers to many important areas through the<br />

use of definition boxes, scenario boxes highlighting<br />

good practice, points to <strong>note</strong> boxes, flowcharts and<br />

diagrams as well as a wide range of questions and<br />

exercises to help apply their knowledge to different<br />

situations and scenarios.<br />

This book will be essential reading for those on<br />

probationer training programmes and a valuable<br />

resource for students taking courses in policing and<br />

criminology more generally where an advanced level of<br />

understanding of the nature of police work is required.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. The Context for the Book Part 1:<br />

Community 2. Community Issues 3. Community and<br />

Crime Reduction 4. Neighbourhood Policing Teams and<br />

Problem Solving 5. Communities – Engagement,<br />

Consultation and Accountability Part 2: Investigation 6.<br />

Criminal Investigations in Context 7. Legislation and Police<br />

Powers 8. Methods of Investigation 9. Investigation<br />

Strategies Part 3: Intelligence 10. What is Intelligence?<br />

11. Developing and Employing Intelligence 12. Intelligenceled<br />

Policing and the National Intelligence Model 13.<br />

Multi-Agency Approaches and Intelligence Part 4:<br />

Investigative Practices 14. The Nature and Investigation of<br />

Sexual Offences 15. Organized and Transnational Crime 16.<br />

Forensic Investigation and Crime Science 17. Policing and<br />

Public Disorder 18. Future Directions<br />

May 2011: 234 x 156: 352pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-532-3: $136.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-531-6: $42.50<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843925316<br />

BESTSELLER<br />

Policing: Key Readings<br />

Edited by Tim Newburn, London School of<br />

Economics and Political Science, UK<br />

This book aims to bring<br />

together the key readings which<br />

constitute this core of policing<br />

studies, setting them within the<br />

necessary theoretical, social and<br />

political context, and providing<br />

an explanatory commentary.<br />

Selected Contents: Part A: The<br />

Emergence and Development of<br />

the Police Introduction Part B: The<br />

Role and Function of the Police<br />

Introduction Part C: Police Culture<br />

Introduction Part D: Policing<br />

Strategies Introduction Part E: Deviance, Ethics and Control<br />

Introduction Part F: The Emerging Pattern of Policing<br />

Introduction<br />

2004: 246 x 174: 848pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-092-2: $137.95<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-091-5: $59.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843920915<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Policing Twentieth Century<br />

Ireland<br />

A History of An Garda S’ochána<br />

Vicky Conway, Queen’s University, Belfast<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> SOLON Explorations in Crime and<br />

Criminal Justice Histories<br />

The twentieth century in Ireland saw colonial rule, the<br />

nationalist movement, the attainment of independence<br />

through a divisive treaty, civil war, poverty, the Northern<br />

Irish Conflict, and more recently the Celtic Tiger, the<br />

impact of globalization and secularization. Each of these<br />

changes brings substantive challenges for police forces.<br />

This book critically evaluates how the Irish police force,<br />

An Garda S’ochána, was influenced by and responded to<br />

the substantially changes which Ireland underwent.<br />

Incorporating data from oral history interviews, analysis<br />

of policing literature, historical documents, government<br />

debates and newspapers this book assesses how the<br />

police force reacted to the intense social, political,<br />

cultural and economic changes.<br />

October 2012: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-69194-9: $135.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415691949<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website


The Police in an Age of<br />

Austerity?<br />

Mike Brogden, University of Lancaster, UK and<br />

Graham Ellison, Queen’s University, Ireland<br />

While the question function has been the bedrock of<br />

classical sociological theorizing on police, this book<br />

explains how British policing has arisen through a<br />

schismatic process, why it is in a present mess, and what<br />

it should be doing in the future.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. The Catalyst – The ‘Cuts’ of 2010<br />

2. The Power Brokers in Policing 3. Chaos, Cost, and<br />

Disorganisation 4. A Mythical History that Legitmises<br />

Policing Modernity 5. The Export Trade in the British Brand<br />

of Policing 6. The Failure to Learn from Outside 7. The<br />

Future of British Policing post the Financial Crisis?<br />

July 2011: 234 x 156: 208pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-69189-5: $155.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-69192-5: $44.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415691925<br />

The Policing of Terrorism<br />

Organizational and Global Perspectives<br />

Mathieu Deflem<br />

Series: Criminology and Justice Studies<br />

This book offers an analysis of<br />

the policing of terrorism in a<br />

variety of national and<br />

international contexts. Centered<br />

on developments since the<br />

events of September 11, 2001,<br />

the study devotes its empirical<br />

attention to important police<br />

aspects of counter-terrorism in<br />

the United States and<br />

additionally extends its range<br />

comparatively to other nations,<br />

including Israel and Iraq, and to<br />

the global level of international police organizations such<br />

as Interpol and Europol. Situated in the criminology of<br />

terrorism and counter-terrorism, this book offers a<br />

fascinating look into the contemporary organization of<br />

law enforcement against terrorism, which will<br />

significantly influence the conditions of global security in<br />

the foreseeable future.<br />

2009: 229 x 152: 248pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-87539-4: $144.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-87540-0: $43.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-86038-0<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415875400<br />

Crime and Terrorism Risk<br />

Studies in Criminology and Criminal Justice<br />

Edited by Leslie W. Kennedy, Rutgers University,<br />

Newark, USA and Edmund F. McGarrell, Michigan<br />

State University, USA<br />

‘Kennedy and McGarrell’s<br />

collection of essays explores<br />

largely uncharted terrain<br />

using the concept of risk<br />

assessment as their guiding<br />

light. The book will be<br />

especially valuable for<br />

terrorism and crime<br />

researchers and for students<br />

of criminal justice, homeland<br />

security, and risk<br />

assessment.’ – Gary LaFree,<br />

Criminology and Criminal<br />

Justice, University of Maryland, College Park<br />

Crime and Terrorism Risk is a collection of original essays<br />

and articles that presents a broad overview of the issues<br />

related to the assessment and management of risk in the<br />

new security age. These original articles show how<br />

researchers, experts and the public are beginning to<br />

think about crime and terrorism issues in terms of a new<br />

risk paradigm that emphasizes establishing a balance<br />

between threat and resources in developing prevention<br />

and response strategies.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Overview of Risk Assessment and<br />

Management 2. Examining the Social Construction of Risk<br />

3. Risk Assessment in Prevention and Response 4. Risk<br />

Management 5. Developing Risk Metrics 6. Risk Tolerance<br />

and Acceptability 7. Case Studies<br />

February 2011: 254 x 178: 304pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-99181-0: $154.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-99182-7: $49.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-89447-7<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415991827<br />

NEW<br />

Criminal Major Case<br />

Management<br />

Persons of Interest Priority Assessment Tool<br />

(POIPAT)<br />

Larry Wilson, ViCLAS, Royal Canadian Mounted<br />

Police, Orleans, Canada<br />

The Persons of Interest Priority<br />

Assessment Tool (POIPAT) is a<br />

new tool for investigations with<br />

numerous persons of interests<br />

and/or minimal investigative<br />

resources. It provides an objective<br />

method to rank those suspects<br />

who are most likely to have<br />

committed the offense and<br />

dedicate their resources to those<br />

persons first. This method of<br />

targeting likely offenders has the<br />

potential to not only save a<br />

significant amount of investigative resources but more<br />

importantly, other potential victims. This book aims to<br />

assist readers in creating a POIPAT unique to their<br />

investigation. It includes a CD-ROM with a template that<br />

can be modified for any type of investigation and a<br />

number of additional tools and guides.<br />

March 2012: 235 x 156: 280pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-4398-9861-1: $129.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781439898611<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

POLICING AND CRIME CONTROL<br />

Community Policing<br />

A Police-Citizen Partnership<br />

Michael J. Palmiotto, Wichita State University, USA<br />

Series: Criminology and Justice Studies<br />

This textbook discusses the role<br />

of community-oriented policing,<br />

including the police image,<br />

public expectations, ethics in<br />

law enforcement, community<br />

wellness, civilian review boards,<br />

and what the community can<br />

do to help decrease crime rates.<br />

In addition, the author covers<br />

basic interpersonal skills and<br />

how these might vary according<br />

to the race, sex, age, and<br />

socioeconomic group with<br />

which the officer is interacting. Finally, students learn<br />

how to initiate new programs in a community, from the<br />

planning process and community involvement to dealing<br />

with management and evaluating program success.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Police History Relevant to Community<br />

Policing 2. Understanding Police Culture 3. Police<br />

Discretion, Police Misconduct, and Mechanisms to Control<br />

Police Misconduct 4. Crime Prevention and Community<br />

Policing 5. Concepts, Strategies, Experiments, and Research<br />

Findings That Have Influenced Community Policing<br />

6. Communities, Neighborhoods, and Multiculturalism<br />

7. Problem-Oriented Policing 8. Community-Oriented<br />

Policing 9. Organizational Change and Community Policing<br />

10. Planning the Implementation of Community Policing<br />

11. Selected Approaches to Training and Planning<br />

12. Distinctive Community Policing Programs 13. The Future<br />

of Community Policing<br />

January 2011: 235 x 156: 376pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-88974-2: $169.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-88975-9: $59.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-83050-5<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415889759<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Crime Prevention<br />

Ken Pease, University of Loughborough, UK<br />

Series: Key Ideas in Criminology<br />

This book seeks to enliven the topic of crime prevention<br />

by looking at pro-social behaviour alongside crime, to<br />

think of improving the quality of life by both deflecting<br />

people from the experience of crime – either as<br />

perpetrators, victims, or worried bystanders – and<br />

nudging them towards collaborative and altruistic<br />

behaviour; by changing things, places and people in<br />

ways which push people from crime and pull them<br />

towards active citizenship. Research and practice is<br />

reviewed taking this wider view of crime prevention.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Why Bother? 2. Changing Things<br />

3. Changing Places 4. Changing People 5. Law and<br />

Organisations: How to Use Them 6. Style<br />

June 2012: 198 x 129: 192pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-61494-8: $110.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-61495-5: $35.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415614955<br />

27


28<br />

POLICING AND CRIME CONTROL<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Policing<br />

Conceptualisations and Practices of Security<br />

Michael Kempa, University of Ottawa, USA and<br />

Clifford D. Shearing, University of Cape Town,<br />

South Africa<br />

Policing draws upon a review of recent literature and<br />

ongoing research pertaining to innovations in policing,<br />

particularly in North America, the United Kingdom,<br />

Southern Africa, South America and Australia. It explores<br />

conceptions, institutions and technologies for policing in<br />

the Anglo-American world since the early twentieth<br />

century.<br />

Policing is a social invention that is undergoing<br />

enormous challenges and changes. The authors trace<br />

these changes and the challenges that have prompted<br />

them, especially those that have taken place since the<br />

mid-twentieth century. They also address the theoretical<br />

and practical governance debates within a global<br />

context and will attract a readership beyond those with<br />

a particular interest in ‘policing’.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. History of<br />

Anglo-American Policing 3. Public Policing 4. The Quiet<br />

Revolution 5. Policing Exports 6. Policing a Global World<br />

December 2012: 198 x 129: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-40841-7: $130.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-40842-4: $31.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415408424<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

3rd Edition<br />

Practical Aspects of Interview<br />

and Interrogation, Third<br />

Edition<br />

David E. Zulawski, Douglas E. Wicklander, Shane<br />

G. Sturman and L. Wayne Hoover, all at<br />

Wicklander-Zulawski & Associates Inc., Illinois, USA<br />

Series: Practical Aspects of Criminal & Forensic<br />

Investigations<br />

Techniques for interview and interrogation have become<br />

even more sophisticated and complex in recent years.<br />

With all chapters revised and expanded, the third edition<br />

of this bestselling book provides the latest information<br />

on establishing credibility as well as interpreting verbal<br />

and physical behavior, among other important topics.<br />

The text includes two new chapters that address juvenile<br />

interrogations and profiling. In addition, all of the<br />

existing chapters have been updated to reflect the<br />

current state of interrogation and interviewing<br />

techniques. This popular title remains essential for<br />

criminal justice professionals.<br />

Selected Contents: Introduction/Overview of the Process.<br />

Preparation and Strategy. Legal Aspects.Memory and False<br />

Confessions. Interpretation of Verbal and Physical Behavior.<br />

Causes of Denials. Interviewing. Why People Confess.<br />

Establishing Credibility/ The Accusation. Reducing<br />

Resistance. Denials. Obtaining the Admission. Development<br />

of the Admission. The Statement. Ending the Interview.<br />

Frequently Asked Questions. Telephone Interviewing.<br />

Specialized Interviews<br />

August 2012: 235 x 156: 450pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-4398-3015-4: $89.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781439830154<br />

NEW<br />

Police Responses to People<br />

with Mental Illnesses<br />

Global Challenges<br />

Edited by Duncan Chappell, University of Sydney,<br />

Australia<br />

Series: Police Practice and Research<br />

Police Responses to People with Mental Illnesses seeks to<br />

reduce a gap in knowledge by providing an international<br />

overview of some of the latest initiatives in the field, and<br />

the challenges still to be confronted in many places in<br />

overcoming cultural and associated barriers to protecting<br />

the rights of the mentally ill.<br />

This book was originally published as a special issue of<br />

Police Practice and Research: An International Journal.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Canadian Police Agencies and their<br />

Interactions with Persons with Mental Illness: A systems<br />

approach Dorothy Cotton and Terry Coleman 2. Tailoring the<br />

Police Response to People with Mental Illness to Community<br />

Characteristics in the United States Melissa Reuland<br />

3. Current Trends in Policing and the Mentally Ill in Europe<br />

Rhonda Moore 4. Policing and the Mentally Ill in China:<br />

Challenges and Prospects T. Wing Lo and Xiaohai Wang<br />

5. The Thin Blue Line of Mental Health in Australia Katrina<br />

Clifford 6. Police Officer Suicide within New South Wales<br />

Police Force from 1999 to 2008 Stephen Barron<br />

November 2011: 246 x 174: 112pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-69937-2: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415699372<br />

NEW<br />

Online Child Sexual Abuse<br />

Grooming, Policing and Child Protection in<br />

a Multi-Media World<br />

Elena Martellozzo, Middlesex University, UK<br />

This book addresses the complex, multi-faceted and, at<br />

times, counter-intuitive relationships between online<br />

grooming behaviours, risk assessment, police practices,<br />

and the actual danger of subsequent abuse in the<br />

physical world. Based on extensive ethnographic<br />

research conducted with the police and a specialist<br />

paedophile unit, here Elena Marellozzo presents an<br />

informed analysis of online child sexual abuse: of the<br />

patterns and characteristics of online grooming, and of<br />

the challenges and techniques that characterize it’s<br />

policing.<br />

This book adds significantly to our understanding and<br />

knowledge of the problem of online child sexual abuse,<br />

the way in which victims are targeted and how this<br />

phenomenon is, and might be, policed.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. A Sociological<br />

Analysis of Real and Virtual Abuse 3. Young People’s Use of<br />

the Internet: Opportunity, Risk and Media Responses 4. The<br />

International Legislative Context of Online Sexual Abuse<br />

5. Collaborative Efforts to Protect Children from Child Sexual<br />

Abuse Online 6. Observing Sex Offenders’ Online Interaction<br />

and Assessing Risk: An Empirical Overview 7. Sex Offenders’<br />

Online Activities and Behaviour – A Review of the Key<br />

Findings 8. Conclusions<br />

March 2012: 234 x 156: 192pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-61821-2: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415618212<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website<br />

NEW<br />

Police Reform from the Bottom<br />

Up<br />

Officers and their Unions as Agents of<br />

Change<br />

Edited by Monique Marks, University of KwaZulu-<br />

Natal, South Africa and David Sklansky, University<br />

of California at Berkeley, USA<br />

Series: Police Practice and Research<br />

In this pioneering volume, an international, crossdisciplinary<br />

collection of scholars and police unionists<br />

address a range of neglected questions, both empirical<br />

and theoretical, about the place of police officers<br />

themselves in the process of reform – what it has been,<br />

and what it could be. They provide a fresh view of police<br />

reform as occurring from the bottom up rather than the<br />

top down. This book will be highly useful for<br />

practitioners and scholars who have a serious interest in<br />

the possibilities and limits of police organizational<br />

change.<br />

This book is based on special issues of Police Practice<br />

and Research and Policing and Society.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction: The Role of the Ranks<br />

and File and Police Unions in Police Reform Monique Marks<br />

and David Sklansky Part 1: The Rank-and-File as Change<br />

Agents 2. Police Reform: Who Done It? David Bayley<br />

3. Police Officers as Change Agents Hans Toch 4. From the<br />

Bottom up: Sharing Leadership in a Police Agency Brigitte<br />

Steinheider and Todd Wuestewald 5. Building the Capacity<br />

of Police Change Agents Jennifer Wood, Jenny Fleming and<br />

Monique Marks 6. Research for the Front Lines David<br />

Thatcher Part 2: Police Unions and Police Reform 7. The<br />

Neglect of Police Unions Samuel Walker 8. Strange Union<br />

Jan Berry, Greg O’Connor, Maurice Punch and Paul Wilson<br />

9. No Longer a ‘Workingman’s Paradise’? Mark Finnane<br />

10. The Human Right of Police to Organize and Bargain<br />

Collectively Roy Adams Part 3: Police Culture, Police<br />

Organization and the Possibilities of Change 11. Why<br />

Reforms Fail Wesley Skogan 12. Enduring Issues of Police<br />

Culture and Demographics Jerome Skolnick 13. Police and<br />

Social Democracy William Ken Muir<br />

December 2011: 246 x 174: 192pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-68679-2: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415686792<br />

RELATED JOURNALS<br />

Policing and Society<br />

Editor-In-Chief - Martin Innes - Cardiff<br />

University, UK<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/gpas<br />

Police Practice and Research<br />

Editor in Chief: Dilip K. Das - International<br />

Police Executive Symposium<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/gppr


POLICING AND CRIME CONTROL BACKLIST<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

POLICING AND CRIME CONTROL / CRIMINAL JUSTICE<br />

TITLE AUTHOR(S)/EDITOR(S) PUB DATE ISBN BINDING PRICE USD<br />

International Police Cooperation Edited by Frederic Lemieux 2010 978-1-84392-760-0 Paperback $49.50<br />

978-1-84392-761-7 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-762-4 e-Book<br />

Policing Scotland Edited by Daniel Donnelly and Kenneth Scott 2010 978-1-84392-938-3 Paperback $44.95<br />

978-1-84392-939-0 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-654-2 e-Book<br />

Crime Prevention Nick Tilley 2009 978-1-84392-395-4 Hardback $125.00<br />

Crime Prevention Policies in Comparative<br />

Perspective<br />

978-1-84392-394-7 Paperback $39.95<br />

Edited by Adam Crawford 2009 978-1-84392-412-8 Paperback $44.95<br />

978-1-84392-413-5 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-725-9 e-Book<br />

Criminal Investigation Peter Stelfox 2009 978-1-84392-337-4 Paperback $39.95<br />

978-1-84392-338-1 Hardback $79.95<br />

Police Corruption Maurice Punch 2009 978-1-84392-410-4 Paperback $40.95<br />

Policing and the Legacy of Lawrence Edited by Nathan Hall, John Grieve and Stephen<br />

Savage<br />

978-1-84392-411-1 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-730-3 e-Book<br />

2009 978-1-84392-505-7 Paperback $44.95<br />

978-1-84392-506-4 Hardback $84.95<br />

978-1-84392-649-8 e-Book<br />

Policing Developing Democracies Edited by Mercedes S. Hinton and Tim Newburn 2008 978-0-415-42849-1 Paperback $55.95<br />

CRIMINAL JUSTICE<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

2nd Edition<br />

A Restorative Justice Reader<br />

Edited by Gerry Johnstone, University of Hull, UK<br />

A Restorative Justice Reader brings together carefully<br />

chosen extracts from the most important and influential<br />

contributions to the literature of restorative justice,<br />

accompanying these with an informative commentary<br />

providing context and explanation.<br />

Selected Contents: Part A: Overviews and Early Inspirations<br />

Part B: The Background: Legacies and Frameworks Part C:<br />

Restorative Justice: Practices and Applications Part D: Ideas,<br />

Principles and Values Part E: Evaluating Restorative Justice<br />

Part F: Controversies and Critical Issues<br />

November 2012: 246 x 174: 608pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67235-1: $130.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-67234-4: $62.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415672344<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Age of Imprisonment<br />

978-0-415-42848-4 Hardback $199.00<br />

978-0-203-92693-2 e-Book<br />

Elaine M. Crawley, University of Salford, UK and Richard Sparks, University of Edinburgh, UK<br />

January 2013: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-263-6: $74.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843922636<br />

This book addresses the issue of the rapidly growing number of elderly men entering and<br />

serving time in prison.<br />

It draws upon extensive original research in four prisons holding concentrations of men aged<br />

sixty-five plus years. It examines, in fine-grained detail, the emotional, psychological and<br />

practical implications of serving a prison sentence late in life and the challenges facing staff<br />

working with this prisoner group. The work reported in this book combines a contextual<br />

policy analysis and an appraisal of current regimes and practices with close observation in the<br />

field and narrative interviews.<br />

This book will be of interest to academics and researchers working in the fields of<br />

criminology, prison studies and social studies of ageing, and those working in prisons in<br />

Britain and internationally.<br />

29


30<br />

CRIMINAL JUSTICE<br />

BESTSELLER<br />

2nd Edition<br />

Comparative Criminal Justice<br />

Francis Pakes, University of Portsmouth, UK<br />

This book aims to meet the<br />

need for an accessible<br />

introductory text on<br />

comparative criminal justice,<br />

examining the ways different<br />

countries and jurisdictions deal<br />

with the main stages and<br />

elements in the criminal justice<br />

process, from policing through<br />

to sentencing. Examples are<br />

taken from all over the world,<br />

with a particular focus on<br />

Europe, the UK, the United<br />

States and Australasia.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Making Sense of Local and Global<br />

Justice Arrangements 2. Conducting Comparative<br />

Criminological Research 3. Comparative Crime 4. Policing<br />

through a Comparative Lens 5. Prosecution and Pre-Trial<br />

Justice 6. Systems of Trial 7. Judicial Decision-Makers<br />

8. Punishment 9. International Policing 10. International<br />

Criminal Justice 11. Concluding Comments<br />

2010: 234 x 156: 240pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-770-9: $125.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-769-3: $42.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843927693<br />

NEW<br />

Crime and Economics<br />

An Introduction<br />

Kevin Albertson and Chris Fox, both at<br />

Manchester Metropolitan University, UK<br />

Crime and Economics fills the<br />

gap for a comprehensive and<br />

accessible text locating the<br />

economics of crime within the<br />

study of crime and criminology.<br />

It is written predominantly for<br />

students, but will also be<br />

valuable for managers and<br />

policy-makers.<br />

Selected Contents: 1.<br />

Introduction 2. A Brief<br />

Introduction to Economic Theory<br />

3. Modelling Criminal Behaviour<br />

4. Rational Choice Theory in Criminology 5. The Labour<br />

Market, Poverty and Crime 6. Economic Tools: Estimating<br />

the Bottom Line of Criminal Justice Intervetions 7. The Costs<br />

of Crime 8. Crime Reduction 9. The Economic Analysis of<br />

Prisons and Community Justice Alternatives 10. Organized<br />

Crime 11. Illicit Drugs<br />

October 2011: 234 x 156: 328pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-843-0: $130.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-842-3: $51.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843928423<br />

Dangerousness, Risk and the<br />

Governance of Serious Sexual<br />

and Violent Offenders<br />

Karen Harrison, University of Hull, UK<br />

Dangerousness, Risk and the<br />

Governance of Serious Sexual<br />

and Violent Offenders is a fully<br />

up-to-date, comprehensive and<br />

user-friendly guide on<br />

dangerous offenders. It<br />

considers what a dangerous<br />

offender is and how such<br />

offenders are assessed and<br />

classified.<br />

Selected Contents:<br />

1. Dangerousness and the<br />

Dangerous Offender<br />

2. Sentencing Policy and Dangerousness Legislation 3. From<br />

Dangerousnedd to Risk and Risk Assessment 4. The Use of<br />

Imprisonment 5. Strategies of Risk Management<br />

6. Strategies of Risk Reduction 7. Women Offenders<br />

8. Children and Young People 9. Mentally Disordered<br />

Offenders<br />

June 2011: 234 x 156: 272pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-66862-0: $145.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-66863-7: $51.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415668637<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Electronically Monitored<br />

Punishment<br />

International and Critical Perspectives<br />

Edited by Mike Nellis, University of Strathclyde, UK,<br />

Ralph Bas, Kristel Beyens, Vrije Universiteit,<br />

Belgium and Dan Kaminski, Catholic University of<br />

Leuven, Belgium<br />

Since the 1980s, electronic<br />

monitoring has been<br />

successfully introduced in a<br />

number of countries worldwide.<br />

Much of the literature on<br />

electronic monitoring has been<br />

produced by officials and<br />

researchers directly involved in<br />

the implementation of<br />

experimental electronic<br />

monitoring programmes and<br />

has been subject to little critical<br />

scrutiny.<br />

This book addresses the broader factors in electronic<br />

monitoring’s development. Drawing on recent<br />

developments in the sociology of punishment and crime<br />

control, this book will develop a critical criminological<br />

perspective on electronic monitoring in selective<br />

countries around the world.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: Introduction 1. Why Study<br />

Electronic Monitoring Now? Part 2: EM – The Pioneering<br />

Countries 2. USA 3. Canada 4. Australia and New Zealand<br />

Part 3: Selected Development of EM in Western Europe<br />

5. England and Wales 6. Scotland 7. Sweden 8. The<br />

Netherlands 9. Belgium 10. France 11. Other Developments<br />

in Europe Part 4: Key normative debates on EM 12. The<br />

Ethics of EM 13. Evaluative Research on EM 14. EM and<br />

the Commercial-Corrections Complex 15. Some Sociological<br />

Reflections on Electronic Monitoring<br />

June 2012: 234 x 156: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-273-5: $74.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843922735<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Frontiers of<br />

Criminal Justice<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Frontiers of Criminal Justice<br />

offers the very best in research on criminal<br />

justice systems around the world, offering<br />

fresh insights on a range of topics in<br />

criminal procedure, including policing,<br />

prisons, courts, youth justice, community<br />

measures, rehabilitation, victimology and<br />

forensics science.<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Epidemiological Criminology<br />

Theory to Practice<br />

Edited by Eve Waltermaurer, State University of<br />

New York at New Paltz, USA and Timothy A. Akers,<br />

Morgan State University, USA<br />

Waltermaurer and Akers bring together leading<br />

researchers and practitioners in a book that transcends<br />

and merges the disciplines of public health and criminal<br />

justice, epidemiology and criminology.<br />

February 2013: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-50496-6: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415504966<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Incarcerating Children<br />

Understanding Youth Imprisonment<br />

Tim Bateman, University of Bedfordshire, UK<br />

This book investigates the systemic determinants of<br />

youth custodial sentencing in England and Wales, offers<br />

an account of the patterns of youth imprisonment and a<br />

nuanced explanation of systemic features at different<br />

times and in different places.<br />

September 2012: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-69716-3: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415697163<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Justice Reinvestment<br />

Can the Criminal Justice System Deliver<br />

More for Less?<br />

Chris Fox and Kevin Albertson, both at<br />

Manchester Metropolitan University, UK and<br />

Kevin Wong, Hallam Centre for Community Justice,<br />

Sheffield Hallam University, UK<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> Frontiers of Criminal Justice<br />

This book looks at the experience of Justice<br />

Reinvestment in the US and the challenges that this<br />

particular type of holistic, evidence-based, economically<br />

driven approach to criminal justice reform will pose in<br />

the UK.<br />

September 2012: 234 x 156: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-50034-0: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415500340<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website


<strong>Routledge</strong> Frontiers of Criminal Justice (continued)<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Long-Term Imprisonment and<br />

Human Rights<br />

Edited by Kirstin Drenkhahn, Free University Berlin,<br />

Germany, Manuela Dudeck and Frieder Dünkel,<br />

both at University of Greifswald, Germany<br />

This book presents the cutting edge of research on the<br />

living conditions of long-term prisoners in Europe,<br />

considers whether these conditions meet international<br />

human rights standards and offers a fully comparative<br />

approach.<br />

May 2013: 234 x 156: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67912-1: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415679121<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Sex Offenders: Punish, Help,<br />

Change or Control?<br />

Theory, Policy and Practice Explored<br />

Edited by Jo Brayford, Francis Cowe and<br />

John Deering, all at University of Wales, UK<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> Frontiers of Criminal Justice<br />

This book makes a holistic contribution to this<br />

controversial field of study by setting the rise and<br />

prominence of work with child sex offenders in its legal<br />

and practical context and offers a sense of direction for<br />

future critical engagement.<br />

June 2012: 234 x 156: 360pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67698-4: $145.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415676984<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Technocrime: Policing and<br />

Surveillance<br />

Edited by Stéphane Leman-Langlois, Laval<br />

University, Canada<br />

This book brings together fresh perspectives from<br />

eminent scholars to consider how our relationship with<br />

technology and institutions of social control are being<br />

reframed, with particularly emphasis on policing and<br />

surveillance.<br />

July 2012: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-50025-8: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415500258<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Youth Justice in Context<br />

Community, Compliance and Young People<br />

Mairéad Seymour, Dublin Institute of Technology,<br />

Ireland<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> Frontiers of Criminal Justice<br />

This book offers a fresh way of considering compliance<br />

in the youth justice system, drawing on examples from<br />

youth justice systems around the world and considering<br />

the social context of community-based disposals for<br />

young offenders.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Responding to Crime<br />

in the Community: The Youth Justice Context 3. The Social<br />

Context of Community-Based Disposals: Understanding<br />

‘Community’ 4. Perspectives on Community: Young People,<br />

Parents and Professionals 5. Compliance with Community-<br />

Based Disposals 6. Negotiating the Pathway of Compliance<br />

in the Community 7. Community-Based Responses,<br />

Compliance and the Role of Parents 8. Conclusion:<br />

Community, Compliance and Practice<br />

August 2012: 234 x 156: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-66792-0: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415667920<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

CRIMINAL JUSTICE<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Legitimacy and Compliance in<br />

Criminal Justice<br />

Edited by Adam Crawford and Anthea Hucklesby,<br />

both at University of Leeds, UK<br />

Questions of legitimacy and issues of compliance lie at<br />

the heart of criminal justice systems and policies. Recent<br />

years have seen greater recognition and awareness of<br />

the essential role of legitimacy, trust and public<br />

confidence in underpinning the effectiveness of criminal<br />

justice practices and institutions. As such, experiences<br />

and perceptions of legitimacy have direct implications for<br />

compliance, whilst securing public compliance remains a<br />

pivotal challenge for systems of crime control. Exploring<br />

the hitherto neglected links between legitimacy and<br />

compliance raises crucial questions about the<br />

effectiveness of criminal justice and point to ways in<br />

which both elements might be enhanced.<br />

This book brings together leading international scholars<br />

to consider a number of connected themes relating to<br />

compliance, legitimacy and trust in different areas of<br />

criminal justice and social regulation. It presents an<br />

inter-disciplinary dialogue and debate that combines<br />

insights from criminology, psychology and socio-legal<br />

studies drawing together conceptual analysis with<br />

empirical research findings in relation to policing,<br />

anti-social behaviour interventions, community penalties,<br />

electronic monitoring, imprisonment and tax avoidance.<br />

In so doing, the book presents advances in theory and<br />

conceptual understandings of compliance and legitimacy<br />

within systems of crime control.<br />

The contributors highlight the importance of normative<br />

and social dimensions to compliance as well as the<br />

constructive role played by experiences of procedural<br />

fairness and legitimacy in systems of justice. This<br />

cutting-edge collection of essays will be invaluable<br />

reading for all those interested in thinking critically about<br />

the future of criminal justice policies and practices<br />

including academics, researchers and criminal justice<br />

practitioners.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Legitimacy and<br />

Compliance: The Virtues of Self-Regulation 3. Legitimacy,<br />

Punishment and Social Order 4. Legitimacy of Penal Policies:<br />

Punishment between Normative and Empirical Legitimacy 5.<br />

JUSTIS: A European Project Promoting Public Trust in Justice<br />

6. Questioning the Legitimacy Of Compliance 7. Resistant<br />

and Dismissive Defiance towards Tax Authorities 8. Some<br />

Further Thoughts on Compliance and Community Penalties<br />

9. Compliance with Community Penalties 10. Compliance<br />

with Electronically Monitored Curfew Orders: Some Empirical<br />

Findings 11. Implant Technology and the Electronic<br />

Monitoring of Offenders 12. Rethinking Compliance: Sticks,<br />

Carrots and Sermons in the Regulation of Youth Anti-Social<br />

Behaviour<br />

June 2012: 234 x 156: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67155-2: $145.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-67156-9: $51.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415671569<br />

31


32<br />

CRIMINAL JUSTICE<br />

BESTSELLER<br />

Offender Supervision<br />

New Directions in Theory, Research and<br />

Practice<br />

Edited by Fergus McNeill, University of Glasgow,<br />

UK, Peter Raynor, Swansea University, UK and<br />

Chris Trotter, Monash University, Australia<br />

This book brings together<br />

leading researchers in the field in<br />

order to describe and analyze<br />

internationally significant<br />

theoretical and empirical work<br />

on offender supervision, and to<br />

address the policy and practice<br />

implications of this work within<br />

and across jurisdictions. Arising<br />

out of the work of the<br />

international Collaboration of<br />

Researchers for the Effective<br />

Development of Offender<br />

Supervision (CREDOS), this book examines questions and<br />

issues that have arisen both within effectiveness<br />

research, and from research on desistance from<br />

offending. The book draws out the lessons that can be<br />

learned not just about ‘what works?’, but about how<br />

and why particular practices support desistance in<br />

specific jurisdictional, cultural and local contexts.<br />

2010: 234 x 156: 584pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-936-9: $149.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-935-2: $53.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843929352<br />

Prisoners’ Rights<br />

Principles and Practice<br />

Susan Easton, Brunel University, UK.<br />

This book considers prisoners’<br />

rights from socio-legal and<br />

philosophical perspectives, and<br />

assesses the advantages and<br />

problems of a rights-based<br />

approach to imprisonment. At a<br />

time of record levels of<br />

imprisonment and projected<br />

future expansion of the prison<br />

population, this work is timely.<br />

The discussion in this book is<br />

not confined to a formal legal<br />

analysis, although it does<br />

include discussion of the developing jurisprudence on<br />

prisoners’ rights. It offers a socio-legal rather than a<br />

purely black letter approach, and focuses on the<br />

experience of imprisonment. It draws on perspectives<br />

from a range of disciplines to illuminate how prisoners’<br />

rights operate in practice. The text also contributes to<br />

debates on imprisonment and citizenship, the treatment<br />

of women prisoners, and social exclusion.<br />

This book will be of interest to both undergraduate and<br />

postgraduate students of penology and criminal justice,<br />

as well as professionals working within the penal system.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Prisoners’ Rights: From Social Death<br />

to Citizenship 2. The Historical Development of Prisoners’<br />

Rights: Rights Versus Discretion 3. The Increasing Importance<br />

of International Human Rights Law and Standards 4. Prison<br />

Conditions 5. Procedural Justice 6. Contact with the<br />

Outside World 7. The Right to Equality 8. The Prisoner as<br />

Citizen: The Right to Vote 9. Conclusion: Making Room for<br />

Prisoners’ Rights<br />

March 2011: 234 x 156: 304pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-809-6: $145.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-808-9: $44.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843928089<br />

Penal Exceptionalism?<br />

Nordic Prison Policy and Practice<br />

Edited by Thomas Ugelvik and Jane Dullum,<br />

Universitetet i Oslo, Institutt for Kriminologi og<br />

Rettssosiologi, Norway<br />

Written by leading prison<br />

scholars from the Nordic<br />

countries as well as selected<br />

researchers from the<br />

English-speaking world ‘looking<br />

in’, this book explores and<br />

discusses the Nordic jurisdictions<br />

as contexts for the specific<br />

penal policies and practices that<br />

may or may not be described as<br />

the ‘exception from the rule’.<br />

Selected Contents:<br />

1. Introduction: Exceptional<br />

Prisons, Exceptional Societies? Part 1: Exceptions or Not?<br />

2. Scandinavian Exceptionalism in Penal Matters – Reality or<br />

Wishful Thinking? 3. A Critical Look at Scandinavian<br />

Exceptionalism: Welfare State Theories, Penal Populism, and<br />

Prison Conditions in Denmark and Scandinavia 4. Media,<br />

Crime and Nordic Exceptionalism: The Limits of Convergence<br />

Part 2: Commodification of Exceptional Penal Systems<br />

5. ‘The Most Progressive, Effective Correctional System in the<br />

World’: The Swedish Prison System in the 1960s and 1970s<br />

6. Comparisons at Work – Exporting ‘Exceptional’ Norms<br />

Part 3: Closing in in the Nordic 1: Cultures of Equality?<br />

7. The Dark Side of a Culture of Equality: Reimagining<br />

Communities in a Norwegian Remand Prison 8. Imprisoning<br />

the Soul 9. A Blessing in Disguise: The ADHD-diagnoses and<br />

Swedish Correctional Treatment Policy in the 21st Century<br />

Part 4: Closing in on the Nordic 2: Prison Management<br />

and Prison Cultures 10. Are Liberal Humanitarian Penal<br />

Values and Practices Exceptional? 11. Prison Size and the<br />

Quality of Life in Norwegian Closed Prisons in Late Modernity<br />

12. A Harsher Prison Climate and a Cultural Heritage<br />

Working Against it – Sub-Cultural Divisions among Swedish<br />

Prison Officers Part 4: Scandinavian Exceptionalism<br />

Revisited 13. In Defence of Scandinavian Excpetionalism<br />

July 2011: 234 x 156: 280pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-66869-9: $140.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-67295-5: $51.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415672955<br />

Probation<br />

Working With Offenders<br />

Rob Canton, De Montfort University, UK<br />

Series: Criminal Justice Series<br />

This book provides a<br />

comprehensive and accessible<br />

introduction to the work of the<br />

probation service. It brings<br />

together themes of policy,<br />

theory and practice to help<br />

students and practitioners to<br />

better understand the work of<br />

probation, its limitations as well<br />

as potential, but above all its<br />

value.<br />

Setting probation in the context<br />

of the criminal justice system,<br />

the book explores its history, purposes and contemporary<br />

significance. It explains what probation is, discusses<br />

emerging ideas around offender management, and the<br />

value of an approach that centres on the idea of<br />

desistance. It considers the practice realities of working<br />

with offenders in the community. The book also covers<br />

the governance of probation and how policy and<br />

practice are responding to contemporary concerns about<br />

crime and community safety – for example through the<br />

management of risk. Although the main focus is on<br />

England and Wales, there is some discussion of other UK<br />

jurisdictions and of contemporary trends in European<br />

probation practices.<br />

This book will encourage readers to appreciate the<br />

practical and theoretical strengths and shortcomings of<br />

contemporary probation practice. Information and<br />

discussion are presented clearly, with guidance about<br />

further study and pointers towards more specialized<br />

readings.<br />

Probation: Working with Offenders will be essential<br />

reading for trainee probation officers and students of<br />

probation and offender management.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Probation and Criminal Justice 2.<br />

Probation’s Histories 3. Probation Values, Justice and<br />

Diversity 4. Punishment, Sentencing and Probation 5.<br />

Prison, Community Sentences and Probation’s Contribution<br />

to Sentencing 6. The Supervision of Offenders: What Works,<br />

Motivation 7. Probation practice: The ASPIRE Model,<br />

Assessment, Planning and the Offender Management Model<br />

8. Probation practice – ASPIRE: Intervention, Evaluation and<br />

Compliance 9. Desistance, Good Lives, Relationships,<br />

Compliance 10. Probation, Risk and Public Protection 11.<br />

Community Service 12. Probation and Prison 13. Victims,<br />

Probation and Criminal Justice 14. The Local and the<br />

National 15. Areas and Their Staff 16. Some International<br />

Perspectives Afterword<br />

August 2011: 234 x 156: 280pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-374-9: $135.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-373-2: $42.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843923732<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website


FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Probation<br />

Key Readings<br />

Edited by George Mair, Liverpool John Moores<br />

University, UK and Judith Rumgay, London School<br />

of Economics, UK<br />

This volume presents a comprehensive selection of ‘key<br />

readings’ in community penalties. The volume is divided<br />

into six sections, each with a detailed introduction from<br />

the editors.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: Government Policy for<br />

Community Supervision 1. Report of the Departmental<br />

Committee on the Probation of Offenders Act 1907 2.<br />

Report of the Departmental Committee on the Training,<br />

Appointment and Payment of Probation Officers 3. Report<br />

of the Departmental Committee on the Social Services in<br />

Courts of Summary Jurisdiction 4. Report of the<br />

Interdepartmental Committee on the Business of the<br />

Criminal Courts 5. Report of the Departmental Committee<br />

on the Probation Service 6. Non-Custodial and Semi-<br />

Custodial Penalties 7. Young Adult Offenders 8. Probation<br />

Service in England and Wales: Statement of National<br />

Objectives and Priorities 9. Punishment, Custody and the<br />

Community 10. Protecting the Public: The Government’s<br />

Strategy on Crime in England and Wales 11. Joining Forces<br />

to Protect the Public: Prisons-Probation – A Consultation<br />

Document 12. A New Choreography 13. Reducing Crime<br />

– Changing Lives: The Government’s Plans for Transforming<br />

the Management of Offenders Part 2: History 14. The<br />

Probation System 15. Justice and the Child 16. A<br />

Handbook of Probation 16. Probation and Re-Education.<br />

17. The Results of Probation 18. Probation and After-Care: Its<br />

Development in England and Wales 19. ‘A Sociological<br />

Analysis of the Early History of Probation’ 20. ‘The Mission<br />

Transformed: Professionalisation of Probation between the<br />

Wars’ 21. Crimefighters of London Part 3: Models of<br />

Practice 22. Social Work Ideologies in the Probation<br />

Service.’ 23. ‘Sentenced to Social Work?’ 24. Probation: a<br />

Changing Service 25. ‘Sentenced to Surveillance?’ 26. ‘A<br />

Non-Treatment Paradigm for Probation Practice’ 27. ‘A<br />

Changing Service: The Case for Separating Care and Control<br />

in Probation Practice.’ 28. Probation Work: Critical Theory<br />

and Socialist Practice 29. ‘Community-Based Alternatives to<br />

Custody: The Right Place for the Probation Service.’ 30.<br />

‘Probation Pragmatism and Policy’ 31. ‘Talking Tough: Empty<br />

Threats in Probation Practice’ 32. ‘Probation Values for the<br />

1990s’ Part 4: Programmes and Technologies of<br />

Supervision 34. ‘Group Work in the Probation Setting’ 35.<br />

Casework in Probation 36. Hostels for Probationers 37.<br />

Community Service Orders 38. IMPACT: Volume 2 The<br />

Results of the Experiment 39. ‘Sometimes I Give them<br />

Money’ 40. ‘Supervised Antabuse Therapy.’ 41. ‘Using a<br />

Risk of Custody Scale’ 42. Social Inquiry Reports: A<br />

Framework for Practice Development 43. ‘Probation Day<br />

Centres as an Alternative to Custody: A ‘Trojan Horse’<br />

Examined’ 44. Community Work and the Probation Service<br />

45. The Probation Response to Drug Misuse 46. Intensive<br />

Probation in England and Wales: An Evaluation 46.<br />

Probation Motor Projects 47. ‘Specialist Activities in<br />

Probation: ‘Confusion Worse Confounded’’ 48. Demanding<br />

Physical Activity Programmes for Young Offenders Under<br />

Probation Supervision Part 5: Diversity 49. ‘Feminist<br />

Jurisprudence – Or Women-wise Penology?’ 50. ‘Probation<br />

in St Paul’s: Teamwork in a Multi-Racial, Inner-city Area’ 51.<br />

‘Policies of Neglect: Female Offenders and the Probation<br />

Service’ 52. Black and Asian Offenders on Probation Part<br />

Six: The Effectiveness Debate 53. ‘What works?<br />

Questions and Answers about Prison Reform’ 54. ‘New<br />

Findings, New Views: A Note of Caution Regarding<br />

Sentencing Reform’ 55. ‘What Works: Nothing or<br />

Everything?’ 56. ‘The Psychology of Criminal Conduct and<br />

Effective Treatment’ 57. ‘’What Works ?’ Revisiting the<br />

Evidence in England and Wales’ 58. The Impact of<br />

Corrections on Re-Offending: A Review of What Works<br />

November 2012: 246 x 174: 576pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67148-4: $165.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-67149-1: $55.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415671491<br />

Resisting Punitiveness in<br />

Europe?<br />

Welfare, Human Rights and Democracy<br />

Edited by Sonja Snacken and Els Dumortier, both<br />

at Free University Brussels, Belgium<br />

This volume provides an<br />

important and exciting<br />

contribution to the knowledge<br />

on punishment across Europe.<br />

Covering both quantitative and<br />

qualitative dimensions, this<br />

book focuses on mechanisms<br />

interacting with levels of<br />

punitiveness that seem to allow<br />

room for less punitive (political)<br />

choices, especially within a<br />

European context: social<br />

policies, human rights and a<br />

balanced approach to victim rights and public opinion in<br />

constitutional democracies.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Resisting Punitiveness in Europe? An<br />

Introduction 2. Political Economy, Welfare and Punishment<br />

in Comparative Perspective 3. Explaining National<br />

Differences in the Use of Imprisonment 4. The Scandinavian<br />

Path to Welfare 5. Penalisation and Social Policies 6. The<br />

Rise of the Penal State: What can Human Rights Do About<br />

It? 7. Human Rights and Penalization in Central and Eastern<br />

Europe: the Case of Hungary 8. Human Rights as the Good<br />

and the Bad Conscience of Criminal Law 9. Victims and the<br />

Penal Process: Roles, Expectations and Disappointments 10.<br />

Punitivity From a Victim’s Perspective 11. Punitive Needs,<br />

Society and Public Opinion: An Explorative Study of<br />

Ambivalent Attitudes to Punishment and Criminal Justice<br />

September 2011: 234 x 156: 304pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67892-6: $135.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-67893-3: $57.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415678933<br />

NEW<br />

Technology, Crime and Justice<br />

The Question Concerning ‘Technomia’.<br />

Michael McGuire, London Metropolitan University,<br />

UK<br />

This book looks at the relation<br />

between technology and<br />

criminal justice, analyzing a<br />

range of technologies to explore<br />

how far they provide new<br />

criminal opportunities and how<br />

it serves as a regulatory force,<br />

both in crime and social control.<br />

Selected Contents: Introduction<br />

1. Technology and IT Technomia<br />

2. Foundations: From Echotechnic<br />

Harm to Industrial Justice<br />

3. Tele-Crime: Misusing<br />

Information Communication Technologies 4. Tele-Control:<br />

From Police Whistles to the Post-Surveillance Society<br />

5. Micro-Crime: Misusing Chemical, Biological and Nuclear<br />

Technologies 6. Micro-Control: CBNTs and the Biochemical<br />

Citizen 7. Of Hairdryers, Hammers and Handguns: Mid and<br />

Multi-Range Technologies 8. Science, Technology and Justice<br />

9. The Question Concerning Technomia<br />

February 2012: 234 x 156: 304pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-857-7: $140.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-856-0: $53.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843928560<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

CRIMINAL JUSTICE<br />

2nd Edition<br />

The Prison Officer<br />

Alison Liebling, Cambridge University, UK,<br />

David Price and Guy Shefer, Institute of Psychiatry,<br />

UK<br />

This book is a thoroughly<br />

updated version of the popular<br />

first edition of The Prison<br />

Officer. It incorporates the<br />

significant increase in<br />

knowledge about the work of<br />

prison officer since the first<br />

edition was published and<br />

provides a live account of prison<br />

work and ways of<br />

understanding the role of the<br />

prison officer in the late-modern<br />

context.<br />

Few detailed narratives exist of prison work and the sort<br />

of role the prison officer occupies; this book addresses<br />

the gap. Using a range of quantitative and qualitative<br />

data and drawing on available theoretical literature it<br />

explores the role of the prison officer in an ‘appreciative’<br />

way, taking into account the little-discussed issues of<br />

power and discretion.<br />

It provides a single accessible guide to the world and<br />

work of the prison officer, looking in detail at the<br />

present role of the prison officer in Britain and<br />

demonstrating the centrality of staff-prisoner<br />

relationships to every operation carried out by officers.<br />

This book will be of relevance to anyone with an interest<br />

in the work of a prison officer; students and others<br />

looking for an introductory survey of the literature and<br />

essential reading for any established and aspiring<br />

officers.<br />

2010: 234 x 156: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-270-4: $79.95<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-269-8: $39.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843922698<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Juvenile Justice Administration<br />

Edited by Peter C. Kratcoski, Kent State University,<br />

USA<br />

Designed for courses in juvenile justice and juvenile<br />

delinquency, this book focuses on theories and models<br />

of administration and explores how these theories and<br />

models are used by the agencies that make up the<br />

juvenile justice system. The book includes a detailed<br />

chronology of juvenile and family law, describes specific<br />

programs utilized by justice agencies and analyzes their<br />

effectiveness, and presents extensive case studies of<br />

juvenile justice scenarios. Individual chapters are devoted<br />

to system response to problems arising out of the family,<br />

the school, and within the community.<br />

May 2012: 235 x 156: 552pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-4398-2160-2: $119.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781439821602<br />

33


34<br />

NEW<br />

CRIMINAL JUSTICE<br />

The Prisoner<br />

Edited by Ben Crewe, University of Cambridge, UK<br />

and Jamie Bennett, IRC Morton Hall, UK<br />

Little of what we know about<br />

prison comes from the mouths<br />

of prisoners, and very few<br />

academic accounts of prison life<br />

manage to convey some of its<br />

most profound and important<br />

features: its daily pressures and<br />

frustrations, the culture of the<br />

wings and landings, and the<br />

relationships which shape the<br />

everyday experience of being<br />

imprisoned.<br />

The Prisoner aims to redress this<br />

by foregrounding prisoners’ own accounts of prison life<br />

in what is an original and penetrating edited collection.<br />

Each of its chapters explores a particular prisoner<br />

sub-group or an important aspect of prisoners’ lives, and<br />

each is divided into two sections: extended extracts from<br />

interviews with prisoners, followed by academic<br />

commentary and analysis written by a leading scholar or<br />

practitioner. This structure allows prisoners’ voices to<br />

speak for themselves, while situating what they say in a<br />

wider discussion of research, policy and practice. The<br />

result is a rich and evocative portrayal of the lived reality<br />

of imprisonment and a poignant insight into prisoners’<br />

lives.<br />

The book aims to bring to life key penological issues and<br />

to provide an accessible text for anyone interested in<br />

prisons, including students, practitioners and a general<br />

audience. It seeks to represent and humanize a group<br />

which is often silent in discussions of imprisonment, and<br />

to shine a light on a world which is generally hidden<br />

from view.<br />

Selected Contents: Foreword. Introduction 1. Prisoner<br />

Backgrounds and Biographies 2. Custody, Care and<br />

Staff-Prisoner Relationships 3. Prison Culture and the<br />

Prisoner Society 4. Identity and Adaptation in Prison<br />

5. Prisoners and Their Families 6. Vulnerability, Struggling<br />

and Coping in Prison 7. Children and Young People in<br />

Custody 8. Ageing Prisoners 9. Women Prisoners<br />

10. Cultural Diversity, Ethnicity and Race Relations in Prison<br />

11. Rehabilitation, Generativity and Mutual Aid. Afterword<br />

November 2011: 234 x 156: 184pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-66865-1: $145.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-66866-8: $44.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415668668<br />

A Dictionary of Criminal Justice<br />

Peter Joyce, Manchester Metropolitan University,<br />

UK and Neil Wain<br />

2010: 234 x 156: 336pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-49245-4: $168.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-49246-1: $46.50<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415492461<br />

A Dictionary of Criminal Justice<br />

is the only dictionary that deals<br />

with criminal justice from a UK<br />

perspective, and in doing so<br />

provides a comprehensive guide<br />

to all aspects of the British<br />

criminal justice system,<br />

including its historical context<br />

and contemporary operations.<br />

This book an invaluable learning<br />

tool for both students and<br />

practitioners of criminal justice.<br />

Working with Women<br />

Offenders in the Community<br />

Edited by Rosemary Sheehan, Monash University,<br />

Australia, Gill McIvor, University of Stirling, UK and<br />

Chris Trotter, Monash University, Australia<br />

Contributions to this book<br />

challenge policy-makers and<br />

corrections systems to<br />

concentrate on community<br />

provision for women offenders<br />

and resist popular calls for more<br />

punitive responses to all<br />

offenders, women included.<br />

Contributors come from a wide<br />

range of countries including<br />

Australia, Canada, UK and USA.<br />

They argue that the<br />

criminogenic lens applied to<br />

women’s offending must be gender-responsive if systems<br />

are to be successful at addressing the disadvantage and<br />

risk associated with offending behaviour.<br />

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. Female Offenders in the<br />

Community: The Context of Female Crime 2. Policy<br />

Developments in England and Wales 3. Policy Developments<br />

in the USA 4. Policy Developments in Australia 5. Coercion<br />

and Women Offenders 6. Victimisation and Governance:<br />

Gender-Responsive Discourses and Correctional Practice<br />

7. Working with Women Offenders in the Community: A<br />

View from England and Wales 8. Beyond Youth Justice:<br />

Working with Girls and Young Women who Offend<br />

9. Breaking the Cycle: Addressing Cultural Difference in<br />

Rehabilitation Programs 10. Women, Drugs and Community<br />

Interventions 11. Managing Risk in the Community: How<br />

Gender Matters 12. Who Cares? Fostering Networks and<br />

Relationships in Prison and Beyond 13. Mentoring<br />

14. Community Mentoring in the United States: An<br />

Evaluation of the Rhode Island Women’s Mentoring Program<br />

15. Maintaining and Restoring Family for Women Prisoners<br />

and their Children 16. Connecting to the Community: A<br />

Case Study in Women’s Resettlement Needs and Experiences<br />

17. Working with Women Offenders in the Community:<br />

What Works?<br />

2010: 234 x 156: 400pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-888-1: $133.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-887-4: $53.50<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843928874<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Principles of Leadership and<br />

Management in Law<br />

Enforcement<br />

Michael L. Birzer, Wichita State University, USA,<br />

Gerald J. Bayens and Cliff Roberson, both at<br />

Washburn University, USA<br />

A one-semester, undergraduate textbook, this practical,<br />

accessible book discusses management and leadership<br />

within a law enforcement agency. Valuable also for<br />

police academies and training courses, it offers a<br />

comprehensive, logical, down-to-earth account of the<br />

current state and future direction of police leadership<br />

and management concepts. Presenting new insights and<br />

understanding with minimal memorization, it includes<br />

action boxes, key terms, practical case studies, and<br />

interactive summary and review sections.<br />

June 2012: 235 x 156: 872pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-4398-8034-0: $79.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781439880340<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website<br />

NEW<br />

2nd Edition<br />

Criminal Law<br />

Charles P. Nemeth, John Jay College of Criminal<br />

Justice, USA<br />

Criminal Law, Second Edition<br />

blends legal and moral<br />

reasoning in the examination of<br />

crimes and explores the history<br />

relating to jurisprudence and<br />

roots of criminal law. It fosters<br />

discussions of controversial<br />

issues and delivers abridged<br />

case law decisions that target<br />

the essence of appellate rulings.<br />

Grounded in the model penal<br />

code, making the text national<br />

in scope, this volume examines:<br />

• why the criminal codes originated, and the moral,<br />

religious, spiritual, and human influences that led to<br />

our present system<br />

• how crimes are described in the modern criminal<br />

justice model<br />

• the two essential elements necessary for criminal<br />

culpability: actus reus (the act committed or omitted)<br />

and mens rea (the mind and intent of the actor)<br />

• offenses against the body resulting in death, including<br />

murder, manslaughter, felony murder, and negligent<br />

homicide<br />

• nonterminal criminal conduct against the body,<br />

including robbery, kidnapping, false imprisonment,<br />

assault, and hate crimes<br />

• sexual assault, rape, necrophilia, incest, and child<br />

molestation<br />

• property offenses, such as larceny/theft, bribery,<br />

forgery, and embezzlement<br />

• crimes against the home, including burglary, trespass,<br />

arson, and vandalism.<br />

The book also examines controversial public morality<br />

issues such as prostitution, drug legalization, obscenity,<br />

and pornography. The final two chapters discuss<br />

inchoate offenses, where the criminal act has not been<br />

completed, and various criminal defenses such as legal<br />

insanity, entrapment, coercion, self-defense, and mistake<br />

of fact or law.<br />

Important keywords introduce each chapter, and<br />

discussion questions and suggested readings appear at<br />

the end of each chapter, prompting lively debate and<br />

further inquiry into a fascinating subject area that<br />

continues to evolve.<br />

November 2011: 254 x 178: 610pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-4398-6171-4: $119.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781439861714<br />

7th Edition<br />

Criminal Procedure &<br />

Sentencing<br />

Peter Hungerford-Welch<br />

2008: 246 x 174: 1048pp<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-44292-3: $73.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415442923


NEW<br />

Justice and Governance in East<br />

Timor<br />

Indigenous Approaches and the ‘New<br />

Subsistence State’<br />

Rod Nixon, Charles Darwin University, Australia<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> Contemporary Southeast Asia Series<br />

Focusing on the case study of Timor Leste, this book<br />

presents the New Subsistence State as a conceptual tool<br />

for understanding governance challenges in countries<br />

characterized by subsistence economic and social<br />

relations. It examines the ways in which Timor Leste<br />

conforms to the typology of the New Subsistence State,<br />

taking into consideration geographic, historical and<br />

socio-political aspects.<br />

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. States, Weak States and<br />

New Subsistence States 2. State Development in East Timor:<br />

Geographic and Historical Factors in the Pre-Colonial and<br />

Colonial Periods 3. The Emergence of Politics and Political<br />

Conflict: Developments April 1974 to December 1975 4.<br />

The Indonesian Period: An Assessment of the Consequences<br />

for State Development 5. The Transition to Statehood 6.<br />

Governance in a New State 7. Timorese Systems of Justice<br />

and Conflict Resolution and the New Subsistence State 8.<br />

Conclusion<br />

December 2011: 234 x 156: 288pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-66573-5: $145.00<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-14786-3<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415665735<br />

The New Criminal Justice<br />

American Communities and the Changing<br />

World of Crime Control<br />

Edited by John Klofas, Rochester Institute of<br />

Technology, USA, Natalie Kroovand Hipple and<br />

Edmund L.F. McGarrell, both at Michigan State<br />

University, USA<br />

Series: Criminology and Justice Studies<br />

2010: 235 x 187: 192pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-99722-5: $159.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-99728-7: $49.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-86016-8<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415997287<br />

Criminal Justice in the United<br />

States is in the midst of<br />

momentous changes: an era of<br />

low crime rates not seen since<br />

the 1960s, and a variety of<br />

budget crunches also exerting<br />

profound impacts on the<br />

system. This is the first book<br />

available to chronicle these<br />

changes and suggest a new,<br />

emerging model of the criminal<br />

justice system.<br />

Lifers<br />

Seeking Redemption in Prison<br />

John Irwin<br />

Series: Criminology and Justice Studies<br />

John Irwin writes about prisons<br />

from an unusual academic<br />

perspective. Before receiving a<br />

Ph.D. in sociology, he served<br />

five years in a California state<br />

penitentiary for armed robbery.<br />

This is his sixth book on<br />

imprisonment – an ethnography<br />

of prisoners who have served<br />

more than twenty years in a<br />

California correctional<br />

institution. The purpose of the<br />

book is to take issue with the<br />

conventional wisdom on homicide, society’s purposes of<br />

imprisonment, and offenders’ reformability. Through the<br />

lifers’ stories, he reveals what happens to prisoners<br />

serving very long sentences in correctional facilities and<br />

what this should tell us about effective sentencing policy.<br />

2009: 229 x 152: 152pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-80168-3: $144.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-80198-0: $29.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-87622-0<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415801980<br />

NEW<br />

Criminal Justice Theory<br />

An Introduction<br />

Roger Hopkins-Burke, Nottingham Trent University,<br />

UK<br />

Criminal Justice Theory<br />

examines the theoretical<br />

foundations of criminal justice<br />

in the modern era, whilst also<br />

considering legal philosophy<br />

and ethics, explaining criminal<br />

behaviour, and discussing<br />

policing, the court process, and<br />

penology in the context of<br />

contemporary socio-economic<br />

debates.<br />

Throughout the book, a realist<br />

theoretical thread acts as a<br />

guide interlinking concepts of social progress, conflict,<br />

and cerebral models of criminal justice, whilst also<br />

recognizing our collusion in the creation of an<br />

increasingly pervasive culture of socio-control which now<br />

characterizes contemporary society.<br />

The complex theoretical issues tackled in this book are<br />

addressed in an accessible style, making this a relevant<br />

and comprehensive introduction to criminal justice<br />

theory for students on a wide range of undergraduate<br />

criminal justice modules. It is also a helpful guide for<br />

those commencing postgraduate studies in the<br />

disciplines of criminal justice, criminology, and law.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction: Modernity and Criminal<br />

Justice 2. Explaining Crime and Criminal Behaviour 3. The<br />

Philosophy of Law and Legal Ethics 4. Policing Modern<br />

Society 5. The Legal Process in Modern Society<br />

6. Punishment in Modern Society 7. Youth Justice in Modern<br />

Society 8. Conclusions – The Future of Criminal Justice<br />

October 2011: 234 x 156: 280pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-49096-2: $160.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-49097-9: $44.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415490979<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

CRIMINAL JUSTICE<br />

2nd Edition<br />

Corrections<br />

Foundations for the Future<br />

Jeanne B. Stinchcomb, Florida Atlantic University,<br />

USA<br />

Series: Criminology and Justice Studies<br />

‘Jeanne Stinchcomb’s book<br />

makes an excellent<br />

contribution to the field of<br />

corrections serving as a<br />

substantial resource for<br />

those teaching corrections<br />

and as a practical inspiration<br />

for those students who will<br />

ultimately lead the<br />

profession.’ – Faith E. Lutze,<br />

Ph.D., Washington State<br />

University<br />

Written by a master teacher with over a decade of<br />

experience in federal, state, and local justice agencies,<br />

this is the most comprehensive, yet affordable,<br />

corrections text on the market. Students will like<br />

everything about it – from the reasonable cost to the<br />

user-friendly narrative that keeps them engaged.<br />

Chapters are written with the passion of a former<br />

correctional trainer and administrator, while balancing<br />

both sides of every issue. Based on proven concepts of<br />

instructional design, the narrative features:<br />

• measurable learning outcomes that are placed<br />

strategically throughout the chapters<br />

• material is presented in a ‘building-block’ method<br />

designed to enhance learning<br />

• ‘Close-up on Corrections’ boxes reinforce content with<br />

real-life stories and examples.<br />

Realistic insights are provided into virtually every aspect<br />

of the ‘correctional conglomerate’ – from the impact of<br />

sentencing policies to the effects of institutional life and<br />

the difficulties of re-entry. Unlike most other texts, an<br />

entire chapter is devoted to the correctional workforce<br />

– which gives students insights into the challenges as<br />

well as rewards of such employment. Best of all for the<br />

instructor, the book’s flexibility and supplemental<br />

material make it a breeze to use in the classroom.<br />

Electronic versions are available for online and hybrid<br />

courses, and it is customizable in inexpensive paperback<br />

form. The instructor’s manual, written entirely by the<br />

Author of the text itself, includes over 500 high-quality<br />

test questions directly correlated with each learning<br />

outcome featured in the text, along with annotated<br />

websites, teaching tips, and powerpoint slides.<br />

February 2011: 254 x 203: 640pp<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-87333-8: $79.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-83158-8<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415873338<br />

35


36<br />

NEW<br />

CRIMINAL JUSTICE<br />

When Crime Appears<br />

The Role of Emergence<br />

Edited by Jean Marie McGloin, University of Maryland, College Park, USA, Christopher J. Sullivan, University of Cincinnati,<br />

USA and Leslie W. Kennedy, Rutgers University, USA<br />

Series: Criminology and Justice Studies<br />

This book brings together work from a unique conceptual perspective that helps to better understand the complex relationships that give<br />

rise to crime.<br />

When Crime Appears: The Role of Emergence is concerned with our ability to make sense of the complex underpinnings of the end-stage<br />

patterns and events that we see in studying crime. The book offers an early narrative on the concept of emergence as it pertains to<br />

criminological research. Collectively, the chapters in this volume provide a sense of why the emergence framework could be useful, outlines<br />

its core conceptual properties, provides some examples of its potential application, and presents some discussion of methodological and<br />

analytic issues related to its adoption.<br />

Selected Contents: Part 1: Introduction 1. Moving Past the Person or the Context: Thinking About Crime as an Emergent Phenomenon<br />

Christopher Sullivan, Jean Marie McGloin, and Leslie Kennedy Part 2: Explaining Crime 2. What is Emergence? R. Keith Sawyer 3. Going Back to the Beginning: Crime as a Process<br />

Travis Pratt and Jillian Turanovic 4. Does Everything Matter? Addressing the Problem of Causation and Explanation in the Study of Crime P.O. Wikstrom 5. Crime Emergence P. Jeffrey<br />

Brantingham and Martin B. Short Part 3. Crime Emergence in Action 6. Individual and Situational Risk in the Emergence of Violent Events Among Youths on the Street Stephen<br />

Baron 7. Predatory Routines and Games Elizabeth Griffiths, Jessica M. Grosholz and Lesley Watson 8. The Emergence of Violence in Drug Market Settings Angela Taylor and Deanna<br />

Wilkinson 9. Risk Terrains and Crime Emergence Leslie W. Kennedy and Joel Caplan 10. Crime Emergence and Criminal Careers Tara Renae McGee and Alexis R. Piquero<br />

Part 4: Studying Crime Emergence 11. Crime Emergence and Simulation Modeling. Modeling Crime Space Patricia Brantingham, Kathryn Wuschke, Richard Frank and Paul<br />

Brantingham 12. Measuring and Analyzing the Emergence of Crime Christopher Sullivan<br />

October 2011: 229 x 152: 264pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-88304-7: $145.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-88305-4: $39.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-80210-6<br />

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415883054<br />

NEW<br />

Social Work Practice in the<br />

Criminal Justice System<br />

George T. Patterson, Hunter College, USA<br />

Integrating social work values<br />

and a commitment to social<br />

justice, this textbook explores<br />

how social workers can practice<br />

to address social problems<br />

within the criminal justice<br />

system and promotes the<br />

development of knowledge,<br />

skills and critical reflection in<br />

this increasingly important area<br />

of practice.<br />

Selected Contents:<br />

1. Introduction to the U.S. Criminal Justice System<br />

2. Legislation and the Criminal Justice System 3. Law<br />

Enforcement 4. The Court System 5. Corrections<br />

6. Alternative Criminal Justice Reforms and Programs<br />

7. Special Populations and Emerging Issues within the<br />

Criminal Justice System 8. Social Work Practice in the<br />

Criminal Justice System 9. Evidence-Based Practice in the<br />

Criminal Justice System 10. The Future of Social Work<br />

Practice in the Criminal Justice System<br />

February 2012: 246 x 174: 232pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-78115-2: $125.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-78116-9: $44.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415781169<br />

NEW<br />

Rethinking Policing and Justice<br />

Exploring Alternatives to Law Enforcement<br />

Edited by Luis Fernandez, Northern Arizona<br />

University, USA and Laura Huey, University of<br />

Western Ontario, Canada<br />

Rethinking Policing and Justice critically examines the<br />

role of policing (both state and non-state forms) in the<br />

provision of justice (and injustice). It also shows a variety<br />

of theoretical, methodology, and other approaches for<br />

the critical evaluation of law enforcement, highlighing<br />

different insights into alternative modes of policing, as<br />

we seek to understand and redraft the relationship<br />

between policing and justice.<br />

This book was originally published as a special issue of<br />

Contemporary Justice Review.<br />

December 2011: 246 x 174: 112pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-69776-7: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415697767<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website<br />

NEW<br />

Bail<br />

Law, Policy and Practice<br />

Anthea Hucklesby, University of Leeds, UK<br />

The book brings together current knowledge about bail,<br />

drawing upon the author’s empirical research into the<br />

remand process in England and Wales over a period of<br />

eighteen years. It offers a detailed analysis of the law on<br />

bail and highlights how changes in law and procedure<br />

have translated into practice.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. History and Origins<br />

of Bail 3. Law and Policy Developments since 1967 4. The<br />

use of Bail and its Importance 5. Police Bail 6. Bail<br />

Decision-Making in Court 7. Bail Conditions 8. Offending<br />

on Bail 9. Initiatives to Increase the use of Bail<br />

10. Conclusion<br />

March 2012: 234 x 156: 320pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-48911-9: $150.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415489119


FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Gender and Crime<br />

Edited by Sandra Walklate, University of Liverpool,<br />

UK<br />

Series: Critical Concepts in Criminology<br />

This new title from <strong>Routledge</strong>’s Critical Concepts in<br />

Criminology series meets the need for an authoritative<br />

reference work to map and make sense of this body of<br />

literature and the continuing explosion in research<br />

output. Edited by a leading scholar in the field, Gender<br />

and Crime is a four-volume collection which brings<br />

together the very best foundational and cutting-edge<br />

contributions.<br />

Gender and Crime is fully indexed and has a<br />

comprehensive introduction, newly written by the editor,<br />

which places the gathered material in its historical and<br />

intellectual context. Indeed, it is an essential resource<br />

and is destined to be valued by scholars and other users<br />

as a vital one-stop research tool.<br />

Selected Contents: Volume 1: Sex And Crime Or Gender<br />

And Crime? Volume 2: Gender, Crime, and Criminal<br />

Victimization Volume 3: Gendered Experiences Of The<br />

Criminal-Justice Process Volume 3: Gender, Crime, And<br />

Punishment<br />

June 2012: 234 x 156: 1661pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-61963-9: $1195.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415619639<br />

RELATED JOURNALS<br />

Criminal Justice Matters<br />

Managing Editor: Arianna Silvestri,<br />

Centre for Crime and Justice Studies, UK<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/rcjm<br />

Contemporary Justice Review<br />

Editor: Daniel Okada - California State<br />

University, Sacramento, USA<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/gcjr<br />

Criminal Justice Studies: A<br />

Critical Journal of Crime<br />

Editor-in-Chief: Roslyn Muraskin<br />

- Department of Criminal Justice, Long<br />

Island University, USA<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/gjup<br />

Law and Society<br />

Editor-in-Chief: Ann M. Galligan<br />

- Northeastern University, Boston, USA<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/vjam<br />

Journal of Crime and Justice<br />

Editor: Michael J. Leiber - University of<br />

South Florida, USA<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/rjcj<br />

CRIMINAL JUSTICE BACKLIST<br />

TITLE AUTHOR(S)/EDITOR(S) PUB<br />

DATE<br />

Criminal Justice in<br />

Scotland<br />

Handbook of Public<br />

Protection<br />

Managing High Risk<br />

Sex Offenders in the<br />

Community<br />

Edited by Hazel Croall, Gerry<br />

Mooney and Mary Munro<br />

Edited by Mike Nash and<br />

Andy Williams<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

CRIMINAL JUSTICE<br />

ISBN BINDING PRICE<br />

USD<br />

2010 978-1-84392-785-3 Paperback $42.50<br />

978-1-84392-786-0 Hardback $136.00<br />

978-0-203-81034-7 e-Book<br />

2010 978-1-84392-850-8 Paperback $59.00<br />

978-1-84392-851-5 Hardback $145.00<br />

978-0-203-83329-2 e-Book<br />

Edited by Karen Harrison 2010 978-1-84392-526-2 Paperback $48.95<br />

978-1-84392-525-5 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-969-7 e-Book<br />

Offenders on Offending Edited by Wim Bernasco 2010 978-1-84392-776-1 Paperback $46.95<br />

Offenders or Citizens? Edited by Philip Priestley and<br />

Maurice Vanstone<br />

978-1-84392-777-8 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-778-5 e-Book<br />

2010 978-1-84392-529-3 Paperback $49.95<br />

978-1-84392-530-9 Hardback $125.00<br />

Protecting the Public? Tessa Boyd-Caine 2010 978-1-84392-527-9 Hardback $125.00<br />

Release from Prison Edited by Nicola Padfield,<br />

Dirk Van Zyl Smit and<br />

Frieder Dünkel<br />

The Prison Officer Alison Liebling, David Price<br />

and Guy Shefer<br />

978-0-203-83331-5 e-Book<br />

2010 978-1-84392-741-9 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-742-6 e-Book<br />

2010 978-1-84392-269-8 Paperback $39.95<br />

978-1-84392-270-4 Hardback $79.95<br />

978-0-203-83299-8 e-Book<br />

Transforming Behaviour Sally Cherry 2010 978-1-84392-927-7 Paperback $40.95<br />

Transitions to Better<br />

Lives<br />

Andrew Day, Sharon Casey,<br />

Tony Ward, Kevin Howells<br />

and James Vess<br />

What Else Works? Edited by Jo Brayford,<br />

Francis B. Cowe and John<br />

Deering<br />

Working With<br />

Offenders<br />

Rob White and Hannah<br />

Graham<br />

978-1-84392-928-4 Hardback $130.00<br />

978-1-84392-929-1 e-Book<br />

2010 978-1-84392-718-1 Paperback $49.95<br />

978-1-84392-719-8 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-720-4 e-Book<br />

2010 978-1-84392-766-2 Paperback $41.95<br />

978-1-84392-767-9 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-768-6 e-Book<br />

2010 978-1-84392-793-8 Paperback $44.95<br />

978-1-84392-794-5 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-0-203-81033-0 e-Book<br />

Justice in Transition Anna Eriksson 2009 978-1-84392-518-7 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-721-1 e-Book<br />

Making People Behave Elizabeth Burney 2009 978-1-84392-699-3 Paperback $42.50<br />

978-1-84392-698-6 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-711-2 e-Book<br />

Supermax Sharon Shalev 2009 978-1-84392-408-1 Paperback $39.95<br />

978-1-84392-409-8 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-713-6 e-Book<br />

37


38<br />

CULTURAL CRIMINOLOGY<br />

CULTURAL<br />

CRIMINOLOGY<br />

NEW<br />

Crime, Policy and the Media<br />

The Shaping of Criminal Justice, 1989-2010<br />

Jon Silverman, University of Bedfordshire, UK<br />

‘Silverman challenges us to<br />

maintain the checks and<br />

balances of a civilized<br />

society, the debate that<br />

underpins it and, in spite of<br />

the inevitable noises from<br />

the media which challenge<br />

the establishment, to<br />

respond with thoughtfulness<br />

and balance.’ – David<br />

Blunkett, MP<br />

Media clamour on issues<br />

relating to crime, justice and<br />

civil liberties has never been more insistent. Whether it is<br />

the murder of James Bulger or detaining terrorist<br />

suspects for long periods without trial, mediated<br />

comment has grown immeasurably over the last twenty<br />

years. So, how does it interact with and shape policy in<br />

these fields? How do the politicians both respond to and<br />

try to manipulate the media which permeates our<br />

society and culture?<br />

Crime, Policy and the Media is the first academic text to<br />

map the relationship between a rapidly changing media<br />

and policymaking in criminal justice. Spanning the<br />

period, 1989-2010, it examines a number of case studies<br />

– terrorism, drugs, sentencing, policing and public<br />

protection, amongst others – and interrogates key<br />

policy-makers (including six former Home Secretaries, a<br />

former Lord Chief Justice, Attorney-General, senior<br />

police officers, government advisers and leading<br />

commentators) about the impact of the media on their<br />

thinking and practice.<br />

Bolstered by content and framing analysis, it argues that,<br />

especially, in the last decade, fear of media criticism and<br />

the Daily Mail effect has restricted the policymaking<br />

agenda in crime and justice, concluding that the<br />

expanding influence of the Internet and Web 2.0 has<br />

begun to undermine some of the ways in which<br />

agencies such as the police have gained and held a<br />

presentational advantage.<br />

Written by a former BBC Home Affairs Correspondent,<br />

with unrivalled access to the highest reaches of<br />

policy-making, it is both academically rigorous and<br />

accessible and will be of interest to both scholars and<br />

practitioners in media and criminal justice.<br />

Selected Contents: Preface 1. Introduction 2. The Media<br />

and the Punitive Gene 3. Politicians, Media and Judges<br />

4. Protecting the Public or Protecting the Politicians 5. Home<br />

Secretaries Against the Home Office 6. In the Shadow of<br />

Number Ten 7. Addicted to Distortion: The Media and UK<br />

Drugs Policy 8. The Cannabis Conundrum 9. Police and the<br />

Media 10. A Changing Media – and a New Media<br />

11. Terrorism and the Politics of Response 12. Conclusion.<br />

Appendix: List of Interviewees<br />

October 2011: 234 x 156: 200pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67231-3: $135.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-67232-0: $49.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415672320<br />

NEW<br />

The Problem of Pleasure<br />

Leisure, Tourism and Crime<br />

Edited by Carol Jones, University of Gloucestershire,<br />

UK, Elaine Barclay, University of New England,<br />

Australia and Rob Mawby, University of<br />

Gloucestershire, UK<br />

The Problem of Pleasure brings<br />

together leading academics<br />

from the UK, the US, South<br />

Africa, Australia and New<br />

Zealand to examine several<br />

aspects of leisure that are<br />

vulnerable to crime, from illegal<br />

hunting to street racing, as well<br />

as the impact of crime upon<br />

tourists and the tourism<br />

industry.<br />

Selected Contents:<br />

1. Introduction: The Problem of<br />

Pleasure – Theoretical Foundations 2. The Paradox of<br />

Cinematic Sexual Violence as Entertainment 3. Crime Time:<br />

The Rise of Police Programming on Television 4. The Making,<br />

Shaking and Taking of Public Spaces 5. Playgrounds Without<br />

Frontiers: Movin’, Moddin’, Pushing the Boundaries of<br />

Pleasure 6. Impermissible Pleasures in UK Leisure: Exploring<br />

Policy Developments in Alcohol and Illicit Drugs 7. The<br />

Problem of Access: Outdoor Leisure Activities and Access to<br />

Private Rural Land 8. Public Disorder, Antisocial Behaviour<br />

and Alcohol-Related Crime: From the Metropilis to the Tourist<br />

Resort 9. Sin City v. Fantasyland: Crime, Legislation and<br />

Policing in Two Different Tourism Environments 10. ‘There<br />

Can Be No Orcs in New Zealand’: Do Media Representations<br />

of Crime Tarnish Tourism? 11. Visitor Perceptions of<br />

Crime-Safety and Attituded Towards Risk: The Case of Table<br />

Mountain National Park, Cape Town 12. Crime and Safety<br />

within Caravan Populations: An Australian Survey 13. Tourist<br />

Victimisation – An Exploratory Survey from Ghana 14. The<br />

Tourist Victim: Paradise Lost or Paradise Regained?<br />

November 2011: 234 x 156: 264pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67236-8: $140.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-67258-0: $49.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415672580<br />

Serial Killers<br />

Psychiatry, Criminology, Responsibility<br />

Francesca Biagi-Chai<br />

Translated by Veronique Voruz, University of<br />

Leicester, UK and Phillip Dravers, University of<br />

Pittsburgh, USA<br />

Francesca Biagi-Chai’s book – a translation from the<br />

French of Le Cas Landru – tackles the issue of criminal<br />

responsibility in the case of serial killers, and other ‘mad’<br />

people who are nonetheless deemed to be answerable<br />

before the law in most jurisdictions. The author, a<br />

Lacanian psychoanalyst and senior psychiatrist in France,<br />

with extensive experience working in institutional<br />

settings, analyzes the logic informing the crimes of<br />

famous serial killers.<br />

Selected Contents: Foreword Jacques-Alain Miller<br />

Introduction: Revisiting the Question of Madness, Véronique<br />

Voruz and Suzanne Yang 1. The Enigma of Serial Killers 2.<br />

Case Study of a Serial Killer Henri-Désiré Landru 3. Landru<br />

and Women: Three Categories Plus One 4. Landru and Men:<br />

A World Divided in Two 5. Landru’s Psychosis 6. Further<br />

Case-Studies. Conclusion. Criminal Responsibilities<br />

September 2011: 234 x 156: 216pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-56112-9: $125.00<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-80505-3<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415561129<br />

FORMS OF CRIME<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Domestic Violence and<br />

Criminal Justice<br />

Nicola Groves and Terry Thomas, both at Leeds<br />

Metropolitan University, UK<br />

This book aims to provide an up-to-date and<br />

comprehensive introduction to the subject of domestic<br />

violence and its interaction with the criminal justice<br />

system – taken to mean the response that is made to<br />

domestic violence through agencies that include the<br />

police, the Crown Prosecution Service, the probation<br />

service and Children’s Services, the courts and the prison<br />

service, as well as by voluntary agencies such as<br />

Women’s Aid.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Theories and<br />

Explanations 3. Policy and Law 4. Policing 5. Working<br />

Together 6. Prosecution 7. The Courts, Sentencing and<br />

Punishment 8. Conclusions<br />

December 2012: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-820-1: $89.95<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-819-5: $34.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843928195<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Gun Crime in Global Contexts<br />

Peter Squires, University of Brighton, UK<br />

This book offers a cutting edge account of recent<br />

developments in the politics of gun crime and the<br />

surrounding social and theoretical issues; it will be key<br />

reading for students engaged in youth crime, violent<br />

crime and comparative criminal justice.<br />

Selected Contents: Preface 1. Introduction 2. The Spectre<br />

of the Gun 3. Gun Crime and Politics in the UK 4. the<br />

Making of American Gun Culture 5. Gun Crime and Poltics<br />

in the USA 6. International Gun Crime 7. Gun Crime and<br />

Theory<br />

January 2013: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-68859-8: $130.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415688598<br />

Life as a Weapon<br />

The Global Rise of Suicide Bombings<br />

Riaz Hassan, Flinders University, Australia<br />

Suicide bombing has become a weapon of choice<br />

among terrorist groups because of its lethality and ability<br />

to cause mayhem and fear. But who carries out these<br />

acts, and what motivates them? By undertaking analysis<br />

of the information in the most comprehensive suicide<br />

terrorism database in the world, Life as a Weapon seeks<br />

to question and in turn undermine the common<br />

perception that the psychopathology of suicide bombers<br />

and their religious beliefs are the principal causes.<br />

2010: 234 x 156: 288pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-58885-0: $169.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415588850<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website


NEW<br />

Understanding and Preventing<br />

Online Sexual Exploitation of<br />

Children<br />

Edited by Ethel Quayle, University of Edinburgh, UK<br />

and Kurt M. Ribisl, UNC Gillings School of Global<br />

Public Health, USA<br />

This book focuses on new research and conceptual<br />

thinking on Internet child pornography that views<br />

perpetrators within context, examines those impacted by<br />

such offending, describes emerging legal and policy<br />

issues, and proposes innovative strategies for prevention<br />

within a dynamic global environment.<br />

Selected Contents: Preface Part 1: Abusive Images and<br />

their Emergence as a Significant Problem 1. An<br />

Introduction to the Problem 2. Children Within the Images<br />

3. The Emergence of the Internet Sex Offender<br />

Part 2: Legal, Social and Familial Contexts of Abuse<br />

4. Child Pornography in International Law 5. Child<br />

Pornography and Law in East Asia 6. The Social Dimension<br />

of the Online Trade of Child Sexual Exploitation Material<br />

7. Online Child Pornography, Paedophilia and the Sexualised<br />

Child: Mediated Myths and Moral Panics 8. Sexual<br />

Behaviour, Adolescents and Problematic Content<br />

Part 3: Prevention and Harm Reduction 9. Risk<br />

Assessment for Child Pornography Offenders: Applications<br />

for Law Enforcement 10. The Importance of Digital Evidence<br />

in Internet Sex Offending 11. Situational Prevention of Child<br />

Abuse in the New Technologies 12. Proactive Strategies to<br />

Prevent Child Pornography Offenses: The Dunkelfeld Project<br />

13. Technological Solutions to Offending 14. A Public Health<br />

Approach to Addressing Internet Child Sexual Exploitation<br />

March 2012: 234 x 156: 312pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-68940-3: $150.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-68941-0: $53.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415689410<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Labour Migration and Human<br />

Trafficking in Southeast Asia<br />

Critical Perspectives<br />

Edited by Michele Ford, University of Sydney,<br />

Australia, Lenore Lyons, University of Western<br />

Australia, and Willem van Schendel, University of<br />

Amsterdam, the Netherlands<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> Contemporary Southeast Asia Series<br />

This book both considers labor migration in its totality,<br />

showing how the divide between illegal and legal<br />

migration is often blurred, and also examines how<br />

governmental and international measures to counter<br />

illegal migration are translated into action on the<br />

ground, and what impact on all kinds of migration they<br />

have in practice.<br />

April 2012: 234 x 156: 192pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-66563-6: $130.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415665636<br />

NEW<br />

Handbook on Sexual Violence<br />

Edited by Jennifer M. Brown, London School of<br />

Economics, UK and Sandra Walklate, University of<br />

Liverpool, UK<br />

This book situates the<br />

complexity of violence within its<br />

broader context and covers a<br />

wide span of sexual violence<br />

including sexual harassment,<br />

bullying and murder as well as<br />

domestic violence.<br />

Selected Contents: Preface:<br />

Standing the Test of Time?<br />

Reflections on the Concept of the<br />

Continuum of Sexual Violence,<br />

Introduction Part 1: Legacies:<br />

Setting the Scene Introduction<br />

1. Sexual Violence in History: A Contemporary Heritage?<br />

2. Sexual Violence in Literature: A Cultural Heritage? 3. The<br />

Legal Heritage of the Crime of Rape 4. Can You Count It?<br />

The Policy Heritage 5. Developments in Investigative<br />

Approaches to Rape and Domestic Violence: The Investigative<br />

Heritage 6. Practitioner Commentary Part 2: Theories and<br />

Concepts Introduction 7. Psychological Perspectives on<br />

Sexual Violence: Generating a General Theory 8. On<br />

Sociological Perspectives 9. Family Violence and Family<br />

Safety: Working Therapeutically with Victims, Perpetrators,<br />

Survivors and their Families 10. Violence and Prostitution:<br />

Beyond the Notion of a ‘Continuum of Sexual Violence’<br />

11. Practitioner Commentary Part 3: Acts of Sexual<br />

Violence Introduction 12. Silencing Rape, Silencing Women<br />

13. Co-Ordinating Responses to Domestic Violence<br />

14. Destroying Women: Sexual Murder and Feminism<br />

15. Violence, Sex and the Child 16. Under their Parents<br />

Noses – Online Solicitation of Young People 17. Practitioner<br />

Commentary Part 4: Responding to Sexual Violence<br />

Introduction 18. Bullying, Harassment and Sexual<br />

Orientation in the Workplace 19. Public Sector and<br />

Voluntary Sector Response: Supporting Victims 20. Public<br />

Sector and Voluntary Sector Responses: Dealing with Sex<br />

Offenders 21. Changing the Community Response to Rape:<br />

The Promise of Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner (SANE)<br />

Programmes 22. Practitioner Commentary 23. Conclusion;<br />

Taking Stock, Plus ca Change, Plus c’est la Meme Chose?<br />

October 2011: 246 x 174: 544pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67071-5: $190.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-67072-2: $59.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415670722<br />

State Crime<br />

Alan Doig<br />

Series: Crime and Society Series<br />

This book provides an<br />

introduction to state crime, with<br />

a particular focus on the UK,<br />

where the use of crime to<br />

achieve policy and political<br />

objectives is an underdeveloped<br />

aspect of academic study. The<br />

book overviews the various<br />

definitional issues, before<br />

exploring possible examples of<br />

state crime in the UK, and<br />

considering why state crime<br />

occurs and how it is<br />

investigated and adjudicated.<br />

2010: 234 x 156: 280pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-307-7: $89.95<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-306-0: $43.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843923060<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

FORMS OF CRIME<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Torturing Terrorists<br />

Exploring the Limits of Law, Human Rights<br />

and Academic Inquiry<br />

Philip Rumney, University of the West of England,<br />

UK<br />

This book considers the theoretical, policy and empirical<br />

arguments relevant to the debate concerning the<br />

legalisation of interrogational torture.<br />

Torturing Terrorists examines, as part of a<br />

consequentialist analysis, the nature and impact of<br />

torture and the implications of its legal regulation on<br />

individuals, institutions and wider society. In so doing,<br />

the book engages in a wide ranging inter-disciplinary<br />

analysis of the arguments and claims that are put<br />

forward by the proponents and opponents of legalized<br />

torture.<br />

The text critically evaluates suggestions that debating<br />

the legalization of torture is ‘dangerous’ and should be<br />

avoided. Further, it examines the argument that the<br />

‘ticking bomb’ hypothetical is a myth and considers the<br />

effectiveness of torture in producing what will be<br />

described as ‘ticking bomb’ and ‘infrastructure’<br />

intelligence. It also includes an analysis of the use of<br />

interrogational torture and coercion by state officials in<br />

the United Kingdom. Finally, the book includes the text<br />

of a torture statute which will be used to illustrate the<br />

difficulties in controlling the use of interrogational<br />

torture and the problems such a law could create for<br />

judges, law enforcement and wider society.<br />

Selected Contents: Themes of the Book 1. A Defence of<br />

Academic Freedom in Discussing Controversial Subject<br />

Matter 2. A Multi-Disciplinary Analysis of the Consequences<br />

of Legalising Torture 3. Analysis of Various Myths that are<br />

Promoted by Both Sides in the Torture Debate 4. The Use of<br />

the Ticking Bomb Hypothetical in Law, Politics and<br />

Scholarship and a Critical Analysis of Commonly Cited<br />

Criticisms of the Hypothetical 5. The (in)Effectiveness of<br />

Interrogational Torture in Producing ‘Ticking Bomb’ and<br />

‘Infrastructure’ Intelligence and the Factors that Impact<br />

Effectiveness 6. The Historic and Contemporary use of<br />

Interrogational Torture by the United Kingdom 7. The<br />

Difficulties in Drafting a Torture Statute and the Problems of<br />

Interpretation, Enforcement and Unintended Consequence<br />

October 2012: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67162-0: $130.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-67163-7: $49.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415671637<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Identity Theft<br />

Emily Finch, University of Surrey, UK and Stefan<br />

Fafinski, Brunel University, UK<br />

This book provides a comprehensive account of the<br />

nature, causes and consequences of identity theft and a<br />

thorough analysis of the efficacy of a range of means of<br />

addressing the problem.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. The Nature of Identity 2. A Typology<br />

of Identity Theft 3. Structural Pressure to Fabricate 4. The<br />

Emergence of the Problem 5. The Impact of Technology 6.<br />

Solutions to the Problem 7. The Consequences of Identity<br />

Theft 8. The Way Forward<br />

December 2012: 234 x 156: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-238-4: $89.95<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-237-7: $39.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843922377<br />

39


40<br />

FORMS OF CRIME<br />

Transnational Environmental<br />

Crime<br />

Toward an Eco-global Criminology<br />

Rob White, University of Tasmania, Australia<br />

This book provides a<br />

comprehensive introduction to<br />

and overview of eco-global<br />

criminology. Eco-global<br />

criminology refers to a<br />

criminological approach that is<br />

informed by ecological<br />

considerations and by a critical<br />

analysis that is global in scale<br />

and perspective. Based upon<br />

eco-justice conceptions of<br />

harm, it focuses on<br />

transgressions against<br />

environments, non-human species and humans.<br />

At the centre of eco-global criminology is analysis of<br />

transnational environmental crime. This includes crimes<br />

related to pollution (of air, water and land) and crimes<br />

against wildlife (including illegal trade in ivory as well as<br />

live animals). It also includes those harms that pose<br />

threats to the environment more generally (such as<br />

global warming). In addressing these issues, the book<br />

deals with topics such as the conceptualization of<br />

environmental crime or harm, the researching of<br />

transnational environmental harm, climate change and<br />

social conflict, threats to biodiversity, toxic waste and the<br />

transference of harm, prosecution and sentencing of<br />

environmental crimes, and environmental victimization<br />

and transnational activism.<br />

This book argues that analysis of transnational<br />

environmental crime needs to incorporate different<br />

notions of harm, and that the overarching perspective of<br />

eco-global criminology provides the framework for this.<br />

Transnational Environmental Crime will be an essential<br />

resource for students, academics, policy-makers,<br />

environmental managers, police, magistrates and others<br />

with a general interest in environmental issues.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Transnational Environmental Crime<br />

2. Eco-Global Criminology 3. Climate Change 4. Biodiversity<br />

5. Waste and Pollution 6. Perpetrators 7. Environmental<br />

Victims 8. Criminal Justice Responses 9. Transnational<br />

Activism<br />

May 2011: 234 x 156: 192pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-803-4: $136.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-802-7: $44.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843928027<br />

NEW<br />

2nd Edition<br />

Endangered Children<br />

Homicide and Other Crimes<br />

Lita Linzer Schwartz and Natalie K. Isser, both at<br />

Pennsylvania State University, USA<br />

Endangered Children: Homicide, and Other Crimes,<br />

Second Edition focuses on the myriad threats facing<br />

children and provides insight into possible solutions.<br />

Beginning with a history of child abuse, the book<br />

explores this phenomenon as presented in literature and<br />

in other cultural references. It then provides<br />

sociobiological and cross-cultural perspectives on<br />

neonaticide. It examines motives for abuse and explores<br />

how shame and denial of pregnancy can lead to the<br />

killing of an infant within moments of its birth.<br />

The book examines legal ramifications to neonaticide in<br />

the U.S. and abroad, including psychological and<br />

psychiatric defenses. Additional chapters focus on<br />

shaken baby syndrome and Munchausen Syndrome by<br />

Proxy, and the book includes a new chapter on<br />

postpartum depression. The authors include profiles of<br />

several notorious cases, including Susan Smith and<br />

Andrea Yates. They also discuss issues related to abortion<br />

and euthanasia, and conclude by suggesting preventive<br />

measures to child abuse and therapeutic rehabilitation.<br />

Exploring a social tragedy from psychological,<br />

sociological, and criminological perspectives, the authors<br />

attempt to answer the many questions that arise from<br />

these crimes against our most vulnerable, offering<br />

readers a thought-provoking resource that is sure to<br />

encourage further research and inquiry.<br />

December 2011: 235 x 156: 287pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-4398-7626-8: $79.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781439876268<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Organized Child Sexual Abuse<br />

Michael Salter, University of Western Sydney,<br />

Australia<br />

Examining the existing evidence, and supplementing it<br />

with further qualitative research, in this book Michael<br />

Salter addresses: the relationship between sexual abuse<br />

and organized abuse; questions over the veracity of<br />

testimony; the gap between the policing response to<br />

sexual abuse and the realities of child sexual exploitation;<br />

the contexts in which sexually abusive groups develop<br />

and operate; the role of religion and ritual in subcultures<br />

of multi-perpetrator sexual abuse; as well as the<br />

experience of adults and children with histories of<br />

organized abuse in the criminal justice system and health<br />

system. Organized Child Sexual Abuse thus provides a<br />

definitive analysis that will be of immense value to those<br />

with professional and academic interests in this area.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. A Subject of Smoke and Mirrors:<br />

Understanding Organized Abuse 2. Sexual Exploitation<br />

across the Public-Private Divide 3. ‘Moral Panics’ about ‘False<br />

Memories’: Theorising away Women’s and Children’s<br />

Testimony 4. Falling Down the Rabbit Hole: My Story 5.<br />

Researching Organized Abuse 6. Living in ‘Two Worlds’:<br />

Families Involved in Organized Abuse 7. Sexual Abuse,<br />

Religion and Ritual 8. Sadistic Abuse: Sexual Abuse with the<br />

Intention to Harm 9. Conclusion: Towards an Integrated<br />

Theory of Sexual Offending<br />

November 2012: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-68977-9: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415689779<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website<br />

NEW<br />

Human Trafficking<br />

Interdisciplinary Perspectives<br />

Edited by Mary C. Burke, Carlow University, USA<br />

Series: Criminology and Justice Studies<br />

Today, there are more people held as slaves than at any<br />

other point in history. The problem has received some<br />

sensational television coverage and law enforcement<br />

agencies are paying increased attention to the issue.<br />

However, this is not enough. It is necessary to increase<br />

the extent to which issues related to human trafficking<br />

are understood and addressed and for those with<br />

experience in the anti-slavery movement of this century,<br />

to make their expertise available to others. This text will<br />

do just that with its wide range of chapter authors from<br />

a variety of academic disciplines and professions, all of<br />

whom have extensive knowledge and ideas about this<br />

important issue. This text also stands out as written<br />

specifically for undergraduate and graduate student<br />

teaching.<br />

Selected Contents: Section 1: Human Trafficking<br />

Explained Introduction 1. Historical Perspective: Slavery<br />

throughout Time 2. Slavery Today: Definitions and<br />

Prevalence 3. How it Works: The Traffickers and their<br />

Methods Section 2: A Closer Look 4. Sociological<br />

Perspective: Underlying Causes 5. Economics: Human<br />

Trafficking and the Global Economy 6. Gender Issues in<br />

Human Trafficking 7. Common Forms: Labor and Sex<br />

Trafficking 8. The Child Slave 9. State Sponsored and Other<br />

Forms of Slavery Section 3: The Anti-Slavery Movement<br />

10. Legal Perspectives: Human Trafficking as a Transnational<br />

Crime 11. International and U.S. Based Efforts to Combat<br />

Trafficking in Humans 12. Community Based Responses 13.<br />

Psychological Implications: Trauma & Mental Health Section<br />

5: Training/Special Topics in Human Trafficking 14.<br />

Training Considerations for Law Enforcement (Holtz and/or<br />

Bornyak) 15. Training Considerations for Health Care and<br />

Social Service Personnel 16.Solving the Problem/Getting<br />

Involved<br />

January 2012: 235 x 187: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-89224-7: $165.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-89225-4: $39.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415892254<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Sex Trafficking<br />

A Private Law Response<br />

Tsachi Keren-Paz, University of Keele, UK<br />

Sex Trafficking: A Private Law Approach examines<br />

existing and potential causes of action against sex<br />

traffickers, in order to outine the argument for fair and<br />

effective private law remedies. Combining a theoretical<br />

inquiry about the borders of liability in torts and<br />

restitution with a political commitment to protecting the<br />

interests of victims of sex trafficking, this book offers a<br />

comparative doctrinal and socio-legal analysis of the<br />

effectiveness of private law remedies. Tsachi Keren-Paz<br />

innovatively and convincingly makes the argument that<br />

all those directly involved in violating the rights of victims<br />

of sex trafficking should compensate them for their<br />

losses, and make restitution of the profits made at their<br />

expense. Sex Trafficking will be invaluable to both<br />

academics and practitioners concerned with prostitution,<br />

modern slavery and trafficking, as well as those with<br />

interests in private law theory and practice.<br />

December 2012: 234 x 156: 240pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-58331-2: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415583312


NEW<br />

3rd Edition<br />

Money Laundering<br />

A Guide for Criminal Investigators<br />

John Madinger, Internal Revenue Service, USA<br />

Many changes have occurred in<br />

the twenty-five years that have<br />

passed since the enactment of<br />

the Money Laundering Control<br />

Act of 1986. The law has been<br />

amended, new underlying<br />

crimes have been added, and<br />

court decisions have modified<br />

its scope. The Act remains an<br />

important tool in combating<br />

criminal activity. Now in its third<br />

edition, Money Laundering: A<br />

Guide for Criminal Investigators covers the basics of<br />

finding ill-gotten gains, linking them to the criminal, and<br />

seizing them. Providing a clear understanding of money<br />

laundering practices, it explains the investigative and<br />

legislative processes that are essential in detecting and<br />

circumventing this illegal and dangerous activity.<br />

Highlights of the third edition include:<br />

• important court decisions and changes in federal law<br />

since the second edition<br />

• new trends in crime and terrorism financing<br />

• the rise of money laundering in connecting with major<br />

frauds, including the Bernie Madoff case<br />

• law and policy shifts related to terrorism and financing<br />

since the Obama administration<br />

• new methods for financial intelligence and the filing of<br />

Suspicious Activity Reports<br />

• how changes in technology have enabled launderers<br />

to move funds more easily and anonymously.<br />

Knowledge of the techniques used to investigate these<br />

cases and a full understanding of the laws and<br />

regulations that serve as the government’s weapons in<br />

this fight are essential for the criminal investigator. This<br />

volume arms those tasked with finding and tracing<br />

illegal proceeds with this critical knowledge, enabling<br />

them to thwart illegal profiteering by finding the paper<br />

trail.<br />

Selected Contents: Basic Concepts. The Historical Context.<br />

Federal Money Laundering Statutes. The USA PATRIOT Act.<br />

Money Laundering Forfeiture. Related Federal Statutes.<br />

International Money Laundering Control. Introduction to<br />

Financial Investigation. Introduction to Books and Records.<br />

Indirect Methods of Proving Income. Business Operations.<br />

Domestic Banking. Banking Operations. International<br />

Banking. Money Transfers. Real Property. Securities.<br />

Obtaining Financial Information. Sources of Information.<br />

Basic Money Laundering Schemes. Diabolically Clever<br />

Laundering Schemes. Fiendishly Complex Money Laundering<br />

Schemes. Fraud and Money Laundering Issues. Terrorism<br />

Financing. Financial Intelligence. Investigating Money<br />

Laundering Cases. The Case File. Bibliography. Appendix A:<br />

Glossary of Terms Used in Money Laundering Cases.<br />

Appendix B: Source Debriefing Guide. Appendix C:<br />

Subpoena Templates. Appendix D: Bank Secrecy Act Forms.<br />

Appendix E: Money Laundering Forfeiture Statutes.<br />

Appendix F: List of Specified Unlawful Activities (SUAs).<br />

Appendix G: Federal Statutes Relating to Terrorist Financing<br />

December 2011: 279 x 216: 430pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-4398-6912-3: $99.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781439869123<br />

NEW<br />

Labour Migration, Human<br />

Trafficking and Multinational<br />

Corporations<br />

The Commodification of Illicit Flows<br />

Edited by Ato Quayson and Antonela Arhin, both<br />

at University of Toronto, Canada<br />

Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> Transnational Crime and Corruption<br />

This book discusses how far large multinational<br />

corporations are involved, intentionally and<br />

unintentionally, in such exploitative labor practices. It<br />

explores how far corporations are driven to seek cheap<br />

labour by the need to remain commercially competitive,<br />

examines how the problem often lies with corporations’<br />

subcontractors, who are not as well controlled as they<br />

might be, and outlines and assesses measures being<br />

taken by governments and international agencies to<br />

eradicate the problem.<br />

Selected Contents: Introduction. Foreword: Corporate<br />

Liability for Violations of International Human Rights Law 1.<br />

Trafficking for Labour Exploitation: Getting the Responses<br />

Right 2. The Commodification of Human Smuggling and<br />

Trafficking 3. Child Labour Migrants or Victims of Labour<br />

Trafficking: A Segmental Approach 4. Displacing Childhood:<br />

Labour Exploitation and Child Trafficking in Sport 5. Labor<br />

Migration, Human Trafficking and Multinational Corporations<br />

within the ECOWAS Region: Challenges and Opportunities<br />

6. Adults or Children? The Case of Trafficking of Children for<br />

Purposes of Exploitative Labour in the Fishing Industry in<br />

Ghana 7. Doing Canada’s Dirty Work: A Critical Analysis of<br />

Law and Policy to Address Labour Exploitation Trafficking 8.<br />

Minimum Wage –An Ally in the Fight Against Human<br />

Trafficking for Labour Exploitation? 9. Responding to Labour<br />

Trafficking: Suggestions from Experiences of Local Service<br />

Providers 10. The Programmatic Approach to combating<br />

Trafficking in Human Beings<br />

February 2012: 234 x 156: 192pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-59599-5: $140.00<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-13473-3<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415595995<br />

NEW<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

NEW<br />

FORMS OF CRIME<br />

International Perspectives on<br />

Child Victimisation<br />

Julia Davidson, Kingston University, UK and<br />

Christopher Hamerton, University of Westminster,<br />

UK<br />

International Perspectives on<br />

Child Victimisation offers a<br />

comprehensive overview of the<br />

established themes and<br />

emergent debates relating to<br />

the abuse and victimization of<br />

children. Highlighting key areas<br />

of global concern, and<br />

illustrated with detailed case<br />

studies of important<br />

developments, Julia Davidson<br />

and Christopher Hamerton<br />

address child abuse, child<br />

poverty, child exploitation, child prostitution, and child<br />

imprisonment within the context of children’s rights, and<br />

international legal and policy issues. Their focus in this<br />

regard is on the ‘place’ of the child in the context of<br />

current victimology and social justice discourses, as they<br />

explore the social, cultural, and political context of<br />

international child victimization. A solid introduction to<br />

child victimization for both undergraduate and<br />

postgraduate audiences, this book will also appeal to<br />

practitioners and policy-makers engaged in child<br />

protection and intervention.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Historical Chapter: The Child Victim<br />

in Global Context 2. Family Systems, Culture and Religion:<br />

Children’s Experience of Abuse 3. Child Abuse: New<br />

Technologies and Globalisation 4. Child Soldiers and State<br />

Victimisation 5. Child Trafficking and Prostitution 6. Child<br />

Prisoners and Legal Capacity 7. Legal Responses and Public<br />

Policy: Child Protection and Human Rights<br />

March 2012: 234 x 156: 208pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-57957-5: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415579575<br />

Transnational Crime and Human Rights<br />

Responses to Human Trafficking in the Greater Mekong Subregion<br />

Susan Kneebone and Julie Debeljak, both at Monash University, Australia<br />

This book offers an evaluation of responses to the transnational crime of human trafficking and governance of the<br />

issue through a case study of the Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS) which comprises Cambodia, the People’s<br />

Republic of China, Lao People’s Democratic Republic, Myanmar, Thailand, and Viet Nam. It analyzes the international<br />

and national legal and policy frameworks and the role of governments, international and national non-governmental<br />

institutions, and regional processes, in responding to trafficking issues in the GMS.<br />

The advantages and limits of the new international framework for tackling human trafficking are explored from the<br />

perspective of the region’s experience with international and national multi-lateral programmes, illustrating how the<br />

new international framework for tackling human trafficking has translated into practice. The book considers issues<br />

about competing mandates, and gaps in strategies for protection and concludes with a discussion of broader lessons<br />

to be learned from the GMS situation and suggestions for future governance strategies in the fight against<br />

trafficking.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. The Discourse on Trafficking: Transnational Criminal Justice and Human Rights 2. Anti-Trafficking<br />

Discourses and International Migration: the Origins 3. The Greater Mekong Subregion: Discourses and Regional Responses in<br />

the 1990s 4. Implementing the Trafficking Protocol in the Greater Mekong Subregion: the Trafficking Definition 5. Prevention<br />

and Cooperation in the Greater Mekong Subregion: Compliance, Legitimacy and Norm Re-Enactment 6. Protection of victims<br />

of trafficking: Criminal Justice and Human Rights in the Greater Mekong Subregion 7. Conclusion<br />

March 2012: 234 x 156: 280pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-59425-7: $135.00<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-12299-0<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415594257<br />

41


42<br />

FORMS OF CRIME<br />

FORMS OF CRIME BACKLIST<br />

TITLE AUTHOR(S)/EDITOR(S) PUB DATE ISBN BINDING PRICE USD<br />

Handbook on<br />

Crime<br />

Edited by Fiona Brookman,<br />

Mike Maguire, Harriet<br />

Pierpoint and Trevor<br />

Bennett<br />

2010 978-1-84392-371-8 Paperback $74.95<br />

978-1-84392-372-5 Hardback $150.00<br />

978-1-84392-968-0 e-Book<br />

Hate Crime Edited by Neil Chakraborti 2010 978-1-84392-779-2 Paperback $42.95<br />

978-1-84392-780-8 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-781-5 e-Book<br />

State Crime Alan Doig 2010 978-1-84392-306-0 Paperback $43.95<br />

State Crime in<br />

the Global Age<br />

Computer<br />

Misuse<br />

Handbook of<br />

Internet Crime<br />

Edited by William J.<br />

Chambliss, Raymond<br />

Michalowski and Ronald<br />

Kramer<br />

978-1-84392-307-7 Hardback $89.95<br />

978-0-203-83296-7 e-Book<br />

2010 978-1-84392-703-7 Paperback $39.95<br />

978-1-84392-704-4 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-705-1 e-Book<br />

Stefan Fafinski 2009 978-1-84392-379-4 Paperback $49.95<br />

Edited by Yvonne Jewkes<br />

and Majid Yar<br />

Rape Edited by Miranda Horvath<br />

and Jennifer Brown<br />

Rioting in the<br />

UK and France<br />

Edited by David<br />

Waddington, Fabien Jobard<br />

and Mike King<br />

Sex Trafficking Marie Segrave, Sanja<br />

Milivojevic and Sharon<br />

Pickering<br />

978-1-84392-380-0 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-728-0 e-Book<br />

2009 978-1-84392-524-8 Paperback $64.95<br />

978-1-84392-523-1 Hardback $129.95<br />

978-1-84392-933-8 e-Book<br />

2009 978-1-84392-520-0 Paperback $44.95<br />

978-1-84392-519-4 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-712-9 e-Book<br />

2009 978-1-84392-504-0 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-714-3 e-Book<br />

2009 978-1-84392-510-1 Paperback $41.95<br />

978-1-84392-528-6 Hardback $125.00<br />

HISTORICAL<br />

CRIMINOLOGY<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website<br />

NEW<br />

A History of Police and<br />

Masculinities, 1700–2010<br />

Edited by David G. Barrie and Susan Broomhall,<br />

both at University of Western Australia<br />

This unique collection brings<br />

together leading international<br />

scholars to explore how<br />

ideologies about masculinities<br />

have shaped police culture,<br />

policy and institutional<br />

organization from the<br />

eighteenth century to the<br />

present day.<br />

Selected Contents: Introduction<br />

1. The Paternal Government of<br />

Men: The Self-Image and Action<br />

of the Paris Police in the<br />

Eighteenth Century? 2. ‘A Species of Civil Soldier’:<br />

Masculinity, Policing and Military in 1780s England<br />

3. Making Men: Media, Magistrates and the Representation<br />

of Masculinity in Scottish Police Courts, 1800-1835<br />

4. Becoming Policemen in Nineteenth-Century Italy: Police<br />

Gender Culture Through the Lens of Professional Manuals<br />

5. Men on a Mission: Masculinity, Violence and the<br />

Self-Presentation of Policemen in England c.1870-1914<br />

6. Shedding the Uniform and Acquiring a New Masculine<br />

Image: The Case of the Late Victorian and Edwardian English<br />

Police Detective 7. ‘Well-set up men’: Respectable<br />

Masculinity and Police Organizational Culture in Melbourne<br />

1853–c.1920 8. Of Tabloids and Gentlemen: How<br />

Depictions of Policing helped Define American Masculinities<br />

at the Turn of the Twentieth Century 9. Quiet and<br />

Determined Servants and Guardians: Creating Ideal English<br />

Police Officers, 1900–1945 10. Science and Surveillance:<br />

Masculinity and the New York State Police, 1945–1980<br />

11. Managerial Masculinity: An Insight into the Twenty-First-<br />

Century Police Leader<br />

December 2011: 234 x 156: 320pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67129-3: $135.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-69661-6: $56.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415696616<br />

Fifty Key Thinkers in<br />

Criminology<br />

Edited by Keith Hayward, University of Kent, UK,<br />

Shadd Maruna, Queen’s University Belfast, UK and<br />

Jayne Mooney, University of Kent, UK<br />

2009: 216 x 138: 352pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-42910-8: $120.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-42911-5: $31.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415429115<br />

Bringing the history of<br />

criminological thought alive<br />

through a collection of<br />

fascinating life stories, this book<br />

covers a range of historical and<br />

contemporary thinkers from<br />

around the world, offering a<br />

stimulating combination of<br />

biographical fact with historical<br />

and cultural context.


Redemption, Rehabilitation<br />

and Risk Management<br />

A History of Probation<br />

George Mair and Lol Burke, both at Liverpool John<br />

Moores University, UK<br />

This book provides the most<br />

accessible and up-to-date<br />

account of the origins and<br />

development of the Probation<br />

Service in England and Wales,<br />

from its origins in the<br />

nineteenth century up to the<br />

plans for the service outlined by<br />

the Conservative/Liberal<br />

Democrat government.<br />

Selected Contents:<br />

1. Introduction 2. Origins 3. The<br />

First Decade 4. Consolidation<br />

5. ‘A Major Part of our Penal System’? 6. 1950-1962 – A<br />

Golden Age? 7. From Morison to Martinson, 1962-1974<br />

8. Alternatives to Custody 9. The End of the Road?<br />

10. Concluding Reflections<br />

August 2011: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-250-6: $140.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-249-0: $47.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843922490<br />

HISTORICAL CRIMINOLOGY BACKLIST<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

HISTORICAL CRIMINOLOGY / YOUTH AND CRIME<br />

TITLE AUTHOR(S)/EDITOR(S) PUB DATE ISBN BINDING PRICE USD<br />

A Certain Share of Low Cunning David J. Cox 2010<br />

YOUTH AND CRIME<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

A History of Youth Justice<br />

Neal Hazel, University of Salford, UK<br />

This book charts of the history of youth justice in<br />

England and Wales from its early distinction from adult<br />

justice in the early nineteenth century to the present day<br />

and considers events that may be useful for future policy.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction Part 1: Charting the<br />

Development of Youth Justice in England and Wales<br />

2. The New Delinquency Problem and Early Answers<br />

(1750-1810s) 3. Early State Involvement and Prisons for<br />

Children (1820-1830s) 4. The Child-Saving Reformative<br />

Movement (1840-1890s) 5. Development of a Youth Justice<br />

System: Courts, Probation and Borstals (1900-1920s) 6. The<br />

Welfarist Peak and Punitive Backlash (1930-1950s) 7. The<br />

Rise of Treatments and Diversion (1960-1980s) 8. ‘No More<br />

Excuses’ (1990-2010s) Part 2: Learning Lessons from the<br />

Past: Policy Messages 9. Lessons Lost: Trends and Patterns<br />

in Youth Justice Policies 10. Lessons Learned: ‘What Works’<br />

from the History of Youth Justice<br />

July 2013: 234 x 156: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-50494-2: $155.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-50495-9: $53.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415504959<br />

NEW<br />

Binding Men<br />

Policing Masculinity in the Courts in the Late Nineteenth Century<br />

Lois Bibbings, University of Bristol, UK<br />

Binding Men investigates nineteenth century notions of masculinity. It examines a number of nineteenth century<br />

criminal cases, focusing upon theoretical themes relating to masculinity and the state in order to offer a way of<br />

reading past decisions as well as a means of analyzing nineteenth century attitudes in society and the courts.<br />

Of the cases selected some are still binding upon English and Welsh courts today, others are first instance decisions<br />

and a few attracted a great deal of sensation when they were heard. Of these the most well-known are R v. Dudley<br />

and Stevens (murder, necessity and cannibalism), R v. Boulton (cross-dressing), R v. Coney (prize-fighting) and R v.<br />

Crippen (the trial of Dr Crippen).<br />

This book combines traditional legal analysis with a more socio-legal and social historical approach. Drawing upon a<br />

variety of sources including trial transcripts, law reports, official correspondence and newspaper stories, Binding Men<br />

unpicks the narratives of masculinity which the cases tell.<br />

Selected Contents: Masculinity, Law and History. Masticating the Male: A Recipe for Masculinity. Mary-Annes and Mollies:<br />

The Carnivalesque, Camp and Cross-Dressing. Manly Diversions, Debauchery and Disorder. Man as Master: The Realm of the<br />

Family. Robbery and Reputation: Blackmail. The Medical Man. Conclusion<br />

March 2012: 234 x 156: 208pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-904-38541-7: $140.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781904385417<br />

Doing Justice to Young People<br />

Youth Crime and Social Justice<br />

Roger Smith, De Montfort University, UK<br />

There is an apparent impasse in<br />

current thinking about youth<br />

crime and justice which is<br />

represented by punitive and<br />

harmful practices on one hand,<br />

and critical objections to these<br />

processes on the other. This<br />

book, whilst clearly located<br />

within the critical perspective,<br />

attempts to move beyond this<br />

blockage, and to arrive at an<br />

alternative strategy for resolving<br />

the tensions between young<br />

people, especially those on and beyond the margins, and<br />

the social world which frames their lives.<br />

2010: 234 x 156: 240pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-840-9: $94.95<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-839-3: $48.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843928393<br />

978-1-84392-773-0 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-775-4 e-Book<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Risk Assessment for Juvenile<br />

Violent Offending<br />

Edited by Anna Costanza Baldry, Seconda,<br />

Universita degli Studi di Napoli, Italy and<br />

Andreas Kapardis, University of Cyprus<br />

This volume is the result of an EU project involving two<br />

different European countries (Italy and Cyprus) on risk<br />

and needs assessment for juvenile violent offenders.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction: Juvenile Delinquency<br />

and Justice in the EU 2. Juvenile Delinquency and Juvenile<br />

Justice in Italy 3. Juvenile Delinquency and Juvenile Justice in<br />

Cyprus 4. Risk Assessment in Juvenile Offenders 5. The<br />

EARN project 6. The EARN Project in Italy 7. The EARN<br />

Project in Cyprus 8. Conclusions<br />

September 2012: 234 x 156: 176pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-822-5: $69.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843928225<br />

43


44<br />

YOUTH AND CRIME<br />

2nd Edition<br />

Effective Practice in Youth<br />

Justice<br />

Martin Stephenson, ECOTEC Research and<br />

Consulting, UK, Henri Giller, Social Information<br />

Systems Ltd, UK and Sally Brown, Inclusive Learning<br />

Solutions, UK<br />

Providing a comprehensive and<br />

up-to-date review of research<br />

and the implications for<br />

practice, the second edition of<br />

Effective Practice in Youth<br />

Justice proves to be an essential<br />

resource for professionals<br />

working within the youth justice<br />

system, those training to work<br />

in youth justice, and students<br />

taking courses in youth justice<br />

or related subjects.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Evidence-Based Practice and Effective<br />

Practice 2. Assessment, Planning Interventions and<br />

Supervision and the Scaled Approach 3. Engaging Young<br />

People 4. Education, Training and Employment 5. Mental<br />

Health 6. Substance Misuse 7. Parenting 8. Restorative<br />

Justice 9. Offending Behaviour Interventions 10. The Secure<br />

Estate and Resettlement. References<br />

2010: 246 x 174: 296pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-61075-9: $130.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-61077-3: $51.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415610773<br />

NEW<br />

Offending Girls<br />

Young Women and Youth Justice<br />

Gilly Sharpe, University of Sheffield, UK<br />

Offending Girls challenges<br />

simplistic representations of<br />

‘bad’ girls in the twenty-first<br />

century and argues that the<br />

interventionist thrust which<br />

characterizes the contemporary<br />

youth justice system has had a<br />

particularly pernicious impact<br />

on girls.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. New<br />

Offending Girls? 2. Historical<br />

Perspectives on Offending Girls<br />

3. The Construction of a Girlhood<br />

Crime Wave: Recent Trends in Young Women’s Lawbreaking<br />

and Criminalisation 4. Reseraching New Offending Girls<br />

5. Pathways into Crime and Criminalisation 6. Accounting<br />

for Trouble: The Girls’ Perspectives 7. The Trouble with Girls<br />

Today: Professional Perspectives on Young Women’s<br />

Offending 8. Youth Justice for Girls in the Twenty-First<br />

Century 9. Conclusions and Recommendations<br />

October 2011: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-758-7: $130.00<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-57704-2<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843927587<br />

NEW<br />

Evidence Based Policy and<br />

Practice in Youth Justice<br />

Edited by Anna Stewart, Troy Allard and<br />

Susan Dennison, all at Griffith University, Australia<br />

Evidence Based Policy and Practice in Youth Justice is a<br />

significant collection that critiques the existing evidence<br />

base about the causes and prevention of youth<br />

offending in Australia and promotes the further<br />

development of this evidence base. It draws on<br />

Australian evidence wherever possible, highlighting<br />

international evidence where Australian evidence is not<br />

available or is conflicting. The book is organized<br />

according to three broad themes that:<br />

• provides up-to-date knowledge about the system and<br />

major approaches for understanding youth offending<br />

• explores the usefulness of alternative approaches to<br />

prevent offending<br />

• identifies the techniques necessary to establish an<br />

evidence base to influence decisions and promote<br />

change.<br />

There is no quick fix to youth offending. Policy makers<br />

and practitioners need to critically examine the available<br />

evidence and select responses that are most likely to be<br />

effective for reducing offending, recognizing the<br />

multiple contexts in which young people experience risk.<br />

This work provides the necessary information and<br />

promotes further development of the evidence base so<br />

that youth justice systems can better meet the needs of<br />

young Australians.<br />

Selected Contents: Evidence Based Policy and Practice in<br />

Youth Justice – An Overview Anna Stewart, Susan Dennison<br />

and Troy Allard Understanding the Youth Justice System<br />

April Chrzanowski and Rebecca Wallis Indigenous Young<br />

People and the Justice System: Establishing an Evidence Base<br />

Troy Allard Developmental and Life Course Criminology:<br />

Theories, Research and Policy Implications Susan M.<br />

Dennison Crime Prone Communities Don Weatherburn<br />

Preventing the Onset of Offending Kate Freiberg and Ross<br />

Homel Situational Approaches to Juvenile Justice Michael<br />

Townsley Assessing Risk of Reoffending Carleen M.<br />

Thompson and Anna Stewart Preventing Reoffending:<br />

Rehabilitative Programs and Interventions James Ogilvie and<br />

Troy Allard Responding to Offending: Youth Justice System<br />

Responses Simon Little and Troy Allard Establishing an<br />

Evidence Base: Program Evaluation Mathew Manning<br />

Establishing an Evidence Base – Economic Analysis Troy Allard<br />

and Matthew Manning Establishing an Evidence Base:<br />

Transforming Administrative Data into Evidence Anna<br />

Stewart From Evidence to Policy and Practice in Youth Justice<br />

Janet Ransley<br />

December 2011: 234 x 156: 250pp<br />

Pb: 978-1-862-87845-7: $90.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781862878457<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Young Adult Offenders<br />

Lost in Transition?<br />

Edited by Friedrich Lösel, Cambridge University, UK,<br />

Anthony Bottoms, Universities of Cambridge and<br />

Sheffield, UK and David P. Farrington, University of<br />

Cambridge, UK<br />

Series: Cambridge Criminal Justice Series<br />

This book brings together<br />

leading experts to analyze both<br />

theoretical and policy issues<br />

relating to young adults and<br />

their treatment in the criminal<br />

justice system, exploring<br />

different approaches to crime<br />

prevention and the treatment of<br />

offenders.<br />

Selected Contents:<br />

1. Introduction 2. Young Adult<br />

Offenders in Juvenile and Criminal<br />

Justice Systems in Europe<br />

3. Youth, Alcohol, and Aggression 4. Childhood Risk Factors<br />

for Young Adult Offending: Onset and Persistence 5. Young<br />

Adult Offenders in Custodial Institutions: Vulnerability,<br />

Relationships and Risks 6. What Works in Correctional<br />

Treatment and Rehabilitation for Young Adults? 7. Young<br />

Women in Transition: from Offending to Desistance<br />

8. Perceptions of the Criminal Justice System among Young<br />

Adult Would-Be Desisters 9. Lost in Transition? A View from<br />

the Youth Justice Board<br />

May 2012: 234 x 156: 208pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-271-1: $125.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843922711<br />

Young Offenders and the Law<br />

How the Law Responds to Youth Offending<br />

Raymond Arthur, University of Teeside, UK<br />

2010: 234 x 156: 160pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-49661-2: $165.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-49662-9: $51.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415496629<br />

How does the law deal with<br />

young offenders, and to what<br />

extend does the law protect<br />

and promote the rights of<br />

young people in conflict with<br />

the law? These are the central<br />

issues addressed by Young<br />

Offenders and the Law in its<br />

examination of the legal<br />

response to the phenomenon of<br />

youth offending, and the<br />

contemporary forces that shape<br />

the law.<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website


Youth in Crisis?<br />

‘Gangs’, Territoriality and Violence<br />

Edited by Barry Goldson, University of Liverpool, UK<br />

’Goldson’s collection is the<br />

first in the UK to<br />

systematically and critically<br />

expose the ‘crisis discourses’,<br />

amnesia and minimal<br />

knowledge that routinely<br />

surround the burgeoning<br />

‘gang control industry.’<br />

Anyone seriously interested<br />

in becoming better informed<br />

about the relations between<br />

young people and violence<br />

should read this book first.’<br />

– Professor John Muncie, The Open University<br />

Few issues attract greater concern and censure than<br />

those that surround youth ‘gangs’. Paradoxically, youth<br />

researchers have conventionally been reluctant to even<br />

use the term ‘gang’ but, more recently, such reluctance<br />

has receded. Indeed, it is increasingly claimed that – in<br />

particular urban ‘territories’ – youth gangs are<br />

commonplace, some young people are deeply immersed<br />

in violence and the carrying and use of weapons<br />

(particularly knives and firearms) is routine.<br />

Comprizing a series of essays from leading national and<br />

international researchers, this book subjects such claims<br />

to rigorous critical scrutiny. It provides a challenging and<br />

authoritative account of complex questions pertaining to<br />

urban youth identities, crime and social order.<br />

This book:<br />

• locates the question of ‘gangs’ in both historical and<br />

contemporary contexts<br />

• engages a spectrum of theoretical perspectives and<br />

analytical positions<br />

• presents and analyzes cutting-edge empirical research<br />

• addresses a range of previously neglected questions,<br />

including those pertaining to girls, young women and<br />

‘gangs’.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Perpetual Novelty: Youth, Modernity<br />

and Historical Amnesia 2. Youth Gangs and Late-Victorian<br />

Society 3. ‘It’s Just an Area – Everybody Represents It’:<br />

Exploring Young People’s Territorial Behaviour in British Cities<br />

4. Collateral Damage: Territory and Policing in an English<br />

Gang City 5. Place, Territory and Young People’s Identity in<br />

the ‘New’ Northern Ireland 6. Beyond Dichotomy: Towards<br />

and Explanation of Young Women’s Involvement in Violent<br />

Street Gangs 7. In Search of the ‘Shemale’ Gangster<br />

8. Young People and ‘Weaponisation’ 9. Mercenary<br />

Territory: Are Youth Gangs Really a Problem? 10. Gangland<br />

Britain: Realities, Fantasies and Industry 11. Gangs and<br />

Transnationalism<br />

February 2011: 234 x 156: 248pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-752-5: $155.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-751-8: $53.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843927518<br />

RELATED<br />

JOURNAL<br />

Journal of Youth Studies<br />

Editor-in-Chief: Andy Furlong<br />

- University of Glasgow, UK<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/cjys<br />

Delinquency Theories<br />

Appraisals and applications<br />

John P. Hoffmann, Brigham Young University, USA<br />

Delinquency Theories:<br />

Appraisals and applications<br />

provides a fulsome and<br />

accessible overview of<br />

contemporary theories of<br />

juvenile delinquency.<br />

The book opens with a<br />

comprehensive description of<br />

what a theory is, and explains<br />

how theories are created in the<br />

social sciences. Following on,<br />

each subsequent chapter is<br />

dedicated to describing an<br />

individual theory, broken down and illustrated within<br />

four distinct sections. Initially, each chapter tells the tale<br />

of a delinquent youth, and from this example a<br />

thorough review of the particular theory and related<br />

research can be undertaken to explain the youth’s<br />

delinquent behaviour. The third and fourth sections of<br />

each chapter critically analyze the theories, and provide<br />

a straightforward discussion of policy implications of<br />

each, thus encouraging readers to evaluate the<br />

usefulness of these theories and also to consider the<br />

relationship between theory and policy.<br />

This text is an invaluable resource for both<br />

undergraduate and graduate students of subjects such<br />

as youth justice, delinquency, social theory, and<br />

criminology.<br />

April 2011: 234 x 156: 320pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-78186-2: $155.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-78187-9: $49.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415781879<br />

YOUTH AND CRIME BACKLIST<br />

TITLE AUTHOR(S)/EDITOR(S)<br />

A New Response to<br />

Youth Crime<br />

Doing Justice to Young<br />

People<br />

Effective Practice in<br />

Youth Justice<br />

Youth, Drugs, and<br />

Nightlife<br />

Understanding Youth<br />

Offending<br />

Youth Justice<br />

Handbook<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

YOUTH AND CRIME<br />

Sex, Drugs, and Death<br />

Addressing Youth Problems in<br />

American Society<br />

Tammy L. Anderson, University of Delware, USA<br />

Series: Framing 21st Century Social Issues<br />

Sex, Drugs, and Death:<br />

Addressing Youth Problems in<br />

American Society explores how<br />

youth lifestyles, identity<br />

pursuits, behaviors and activities<br />

produce a wide range of social<br />

problems in contemporary<br />

society. The book focuses on<br />

the interconnections between<br />

three of the most significant<br />

youth issues: sexuality,<br />

substance use and suicide. The<br />

book pays special attention to the unique pursuits of<br />

young people and the locations in which they interact,<br />

including virtual places like Facebook and more actual<br />

ones such as high school, college, and nightclubs.<br />

Patterns among females and males of various class, race,<br />

and ethnic backgrounds are also featured prominently in<br />

the text as well as how sociologists think about and<br />

study them.<br />

2010: 254 x 178: 84pp<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-89205-6: $9.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-83422-0<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415892056<br />

PUB<br />

DATE<br />

Edited by David Smith 2010<br />

Roger Smith 2010<br />

Martin Stephenson, Henri<br />

Giller and Sally Brown<br />

Geoffrey Hunt, Molly<br />

Moloney and Kristin Evans<br />

Stephen Case and Kevin<br />

Haines<br />

Edited by Wayne Taylor, Rod<br />

Earle and Richard Hester<br />

2010<br />

2010<br />

2009<br />

2009<br />

ISBN BINDING PRICE<br />

USD<br />

978-1-84392-754-9 Paperback $49.95<br />

978-1-84392-755-6 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-0-203-81035-4 e-Book<br />

978-1-84392-839-3 Paperback $48.95<br />

978-1-84392-840-9 Hardback $94.95<br />

978-0-203-81029-3 e-Book<br />

978-0-415-61077-3 Paperback $51.95<br />

978-0-415-61075-9 Hardback $130.00<br />

978-0-203-83194-6 e-Book<br />

978-0-415-37473-6 Paperback $48.95<br />

978-0-415-37471-2 Hardback $144.00<br />

978-0-203-92941-4 e-Book<br />

978-1-84392-341-1 Paperback $49.95<br />

978-1-84392-342-8 Hardback $125.00<br />

978-1-84392-734-1 e-Book<br />

978-1-84392-716-7 Paperback $42.50<br />

978-1-84392-717-4 Hardback $89.95<br />

45


46<br />

FORENSIC CRIMINOLOGY<br />

FORENSIC CRIMINOLOGY<br />

Crime Science Series<br />

Richard Wortley, UCL Jill Dando Institute for Crime Science, UK<br />

The Crime Science series is utilitarian in its orientation and multidisciplinary in its<br />

foundations, drawing on disciplines from both the social and physical sciences, including<br />

criminology, sociology, psychology, geography, economics, architecture, industrial design,<br />

epidemiology, computer science, mathematics, engineering and biology.<br />

BESTSELLER<br />

Environmental Criminology<br />

and Crime Analysis<br />

Edited by Richard Wortley and Lorraine<br />

Mazerolle<br />

This text brings together for the<br />

first time the key contributions<br />

to environmental criminology to<br />

comprehensively define the field<br />

and synthesize the concepts and<br />

ideas surrounding<br />

environmental criminology.<br />

Selected Contents:<br />

1. Environmental Criminology and<br />

Crime Analysis: Situating the<br />

Theory, Analytic Approach and<br />

Application<br />

Part 1: Understanding the<br />

Crime Event 2. Rational Choice Perspective 3. Situational<br />

Precipitators of Crime 4. Routine Activities Approach<br />

5. Crime Pattern Theory Part 2: Analysing Crime Patterns<br />

6. Crime Mapping and Hotspot Analysis 7. Repeat<br />

Victimisation 8. Geographic Profiling Part 3: Preventing<br />

and Controlling Crime 9. Crime Prevention Through<br />

Environmental Design 10. Situational Crime Prevention<br />

11. Designing Products Against Crime 12. Problem-Oriented<br />

Policing 13. Broken Windows 14. Intelligence-Led Policing<br />

2008: 246 x 174: 320pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-281-0: $125.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-280-3: $39.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843922803<br />

NEW<br />

Patterns, Prevention, and<br />

Geometry of Crime<br />

Edited by Martin A. Andresen and J. Bryan<br />

Kinney, both at Simon Fraser University, Canada<br />

December 2011: 234 x 156: 200pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-68587-0: $135.00<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415685870<br />

This book gathers together<br />

leading scholars in the field of<br />

environmental criminology to<br />

honour the work of P&P<br />

Brantingham with new work on<br />

the geometry of crime, patterns<br />

in crime and crime generators<br />

and attractors.<br />

Psychological Criminology<br />

An Integrative Approach<br />

Richard Wortley, UCL Jill Dando Institute for<br />

Crime Science, UK<br />

Series: Crime Science Series<br />

The book provides a<br />

comprehensive coverage of<br />

psychological theories of crime<br />

and criminality, emphasizing<br />

the connections among<br />

approaches, and to show how,<br />

taken together, they provide a<br />

more complete picture of<br />

crime and criminality.<br />

Selected Contents:<br />

1. Introduction 2. Human<br />

Nature 3. Heredity 4. The Brain<br />

5. Personality 6. Development<br />

7. Learning 8. Cognition 9. Situations 10. Conclusions<br />

April 2011: 234 x 156: 288pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-806-5: $125.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-805-8: $39.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843928058<br />

NEW<br />

The Reasoning Criminologist<br />

Essays in Honour of Ronald V. Clarke<br />

Edited by Nick Tilley, UCL Jill Dando Institute of<br />

Crime Science, UK and Graham Farrell,<br />

Loughborough University, UK<br />

November 2011: 234 x 156: 288pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-68851-2: $165.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-68852-9: $53.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415688529<br />

Ronald V. Clarke has made a<br />

significant contribution to the<br />

field of Criminology, his<br />

rational choice models and<br />

situational crime prevention<br />

strategies offering a practical<br />

solution to today’s crime<br />

problem. In this unique<br />

collection of essays, Tilley and<br />

Farrell bring together leading<br />

academics from around the<br />

word to honour his work.<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Forensic Criminology<br />

Andrew Williams, Portsmouth University, UK<br />

This book aims to fill a gap in<br />

the literature by combining the<br />

area of forensic science with<br />

criminology. In doing so, it<br />

provides a much needed<br />

sociological and criminological<br />

analysis of the context in which<br />

techniques forensic science is<br />

applied to identify and<br />

prosecute offenders.<br />

Selected Contents:<br />

Part 1: Epistemological Origins<br />

and Developments<br />

1. Introduction 2. The Science Disciplines and Constructing<br />

Knowledge 3. Logic and the Art of Reasoning<br />

Part 2: Criminal Investigations 4. The History and<br />

Development of Criminal Investigations 5. Collecting<br />

Evidence 6. Contemporary Frameworks and Protocols<br />

Part 3: Forensic Science 7. The History and Development<br />

of Forensic Science Techniques 8. Basic Concepts and<br />

Analysis Techniques 9. Types of Evidence and Crime Scene<br />

Examination Part 4: The Law and Legal Process<br />

10. Pre-Trial Issues and Legal Structures 11. Experts, Juries<br />

and Interpreting Evidence 12. Miscarriages of Justice<br />

Part 5: An Integrated Approach 13. After the Trial<br />

14. Conclusion and Future Directions<br />

September 2012: 234 x 156: 320pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67267-2: $130.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-67268-9: $51.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415672689<br />

Biosocial Criminology<br />

New Directions in Theory and Research<br />

Edited by Anthony Walsh and Kevin M. Beaver<br />

Series: Criminology and Justice Studies<br />

This book is designed to bring<br />

criminology into the twenty-first<br />

century by showing how leading<br />

criminologists have integrated<br />

aspects of the biological<br />

sciences into their discipline.<br />

These authors cover behavior<br />

and molecular genetics,<br />

epigenetics, evolutionary<br />

biology, and neuroscience, and<br />

apply them to various correlates<br />

of crime such as age, race, and<br />

gender. There are also chapters<br />

on substance abuse, psychopathy, career criminals,<br />

testosterone and treatment. While not trashing<br />

traditional ideas about these topics, the authors of these<br />

chapters show how biosocial concepts add to,<br />

complement, and strengthen those ideas. The book is<br />

uniquely valuable in that it brings together many of the<br />

leading figures in biosocial criminology to illustrate how<br />

the major issues and concerns of criminologists cannot<br />

be adequately addressed without understanding their<br />

genetic, hormonal, neurological, and evolutionary bases.<br />

2008: 235 x 156: 304pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-98943-5: $145.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-98944-2: $49.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-92991-9<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415989442<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website


Issues in Forensic Psychology<br />

Richard Shuker, HM Prison Grendon, UK<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Managing Clinical Risk<br />

A Guide to Effective Practice<br />

Edited by Caroline Logan, Secure Psychological<br />

Services, Mersey Care NHS Trust, UK and<br />

Lorraine Johnstone, The Douglas Inch Centre, UK<br />

Violence and self-injury cause anxiety, misery and<br />

physical and psychological damage to service users, their<br />

carers, the practitioners who look after them, and in<br />

some cases, the public at large.<br />

Selected Contents: Foreword. Preface Part 1: Setting the<br />

Scene 1. The History and Mystery of Clinical Risk<br />

Assessment and Management Part 2: Key Areas of<br />

Practice 2. Violence Risk 3. Sexual Violence 4. Suicide and<br />

Deliberate Self-injury 5. Fire-Setting 6. Terrorists and<br />

Extremists 7. Working to Enhance Protective Factors<br />

8. Working with an Awareness of Equality and Diversity<br />

Part 3: Clinical Risk Assessment and Management<br />

Practice with Special Groups 9. Working with<br />

Long-sentence Prisoners and Long-stay Forensic Patients<br />

10. Working with Women 11. Working with Children and<br />

Young People 12. Working with Families 13. Working with<br />

Clients with Learning Difficulties or Cognitive Impairment<br />

14. Working with Comorbidity and Complex Case<br />

Presentations Part 4: Clinical Risk Assessment in<br />

Organisations 15. Situational and Organisational Issues in<br />

Risk Assessment and Management Part 5: Communication<br />

and Legal Issues 16. The Risk Assessment Interview and<br />

Report: Clinical Skills and Techniques 17. Risk Assessment: A<br />

Lawyer’s Critique Part 6: Future Directions 18. Future<br />

Directions in Research into Clinical Risk Assessment and<br />

Management Part 7: Concluding Comments<br />

19. Concluding Comments<br />

June 2012: 234 x 156: 272pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-854-6: $89.95<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-853-9: $49.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781843928539<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

NEW<br />

Research in Practice for<br />

Forensic Professionals<br />

Edited by Kerry Sheldon, Peaks Academic and<br />

Research Unit, Rampton Hospital, UK, Jason Davies,<br />

ABM University Health Board, UK and Kevin<br />

Howells, University of Nottingham, UK<br />

‘There is no single way to do<br />

good research. The Editors of<br />

this text have taken a broad<br />

perspective, and<br />

contributions cover a wide<br />

range of research issues and<br />

specific methods applicable<br />

in forensic work. Chapters<br />

are authored by leading<br />

researchers, who explain<br />

their methods clearly,<br />

without sacrificing detail.<br />

This book will certainly be of<br />

use to students who are developing their research<br />

skills. I would also strongly recommend it to<br />

qualified practitioners who wish to gather<br />

information about their service users, evaluate<br />

their interventions, or better understand the<br />

systems in which they work with offenders.<br />

Whether your job is to catch and convict offenders,<br />

or to work with them to reduce risk, in this book<br />

you will find a way to answer some of the<br />

important questions you have no doubt asked in<br />

the past.’ – Professor Mary McMurran, Institute of<br />

Mental Health, University of Nottingham<br />

This book explores the use of applied research methods<br />

used in forensic settings and provides a ‘how-to’ book<br />

for forensic practitioners and researchers. Editors have<br />

backgrounds as both practitioners and researchers.<br />

November 2011: 234 x 156: 368pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-67271-9: $155.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-67272-6: $48.95<br />

Secure Recovery<br />

Approaches to Recovery in Forensic Mental Health Settings<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415672726<br />

Edited by Gerard Drennan and Deborah Alred, both at Sussex Partnership Trust, UK<br />

Secure Recovery presents a cross-section of experiences in high, medium and low secure services and prison-based<br />

therapeutic communities in England and Scotland that have begun to implement a recovery-orientation to the<br />

rehabilitation of offenders with mental health needs. Taken together, the contributions set out a road map of guiding<br />

principles, practical and evidence-based strategies for promoting service user participation in their care and treatment.<br />

Selected Contents: Foreword 1. Recovery in Forensic Mental Health Settings: From Alienation to Integration 2. Balancing<br />

Risk and Recovery: A Clinician’s View 3. ‘Nothing for Us Without Us Either’: Forensic Service User Involvement 4. Recovery in<br />

the Forensic Organisation 5. Giving Voice to Recovery: Perspectives from Within a High Secure Hospital 6. Recovery for Men<br />

with Cognitive Difficulties and Impulsive Challenging Behaviour in a High Secure Hospital: What Does it Mean and How do we<br />

Promote it? 7. Recovering Personhood: Using Recovery Principles on a Long-Stay Medium Secure Ward 8. Harnessing Hearts<br />

and Minds for Change 8. The See-saw of Recovery in Women’s Secure Care 9. ‘Supporting Recovery’ and ‘Moving On’ – The<br />

Recovery Approach Applied to Group Intervention Programmes in In-patient Settings 10. The See-saw of Recovery in<br />

Women’s Secure Care 11. Recovery Within a Prison Therapeutic Community: Setting the Scene 12. Embedding Recovery into<br />

Training for Mental Health Practitioners 13. Recovery Evaluation: The Scottish Forensic Services 14. Evaluating Recovery at a<br />

Forensic Mental Health Service using the Developing Recovery Enhancing Environments Measure (DREEM)<br />

May 2012: 234 x 156: 256pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-84392-837-9: $150.00<br />

Pb: 978-1-84392-836-2: $49.95<br />

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781843928362<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

FORENSIC CRIMINOLOGY<br />

Professionalizing Offender<br />

Profiling<br />

Forensic and Investigative Psychology in<br />

Practice<br />

Edited by Laurence Alison, Liverpool University, UK<br />

and Lee Rainbow, National Policing Improvement<br />

Agency, UK<br />

Edited by and containing contributions from the most<br />

respected and experienced researchers and practitioners<br />

working today, this book will be essential reading for<br />

Police Officers, researchers, students and anyone with an<br />

interest in the professionalization and contemporary<br />

contribution of forensic psychology to twenty-first<br />

century criminal investigation.<br />

Selected Contents: Preface: An Invented Truth and the<br />

Journey from R-v-Stagg Part 1: Professionalizing The<br />

Process Introduction 1. Taming the Beast: The UK Approach<br />

to the Management of Behavioural Investigative Advice 2.<br />

What Behavioural Investigative Advisors Actually Do? 3. BIA<br />

Support to Investigative Decision Making 4. Pragmatic<br />

solutions to offender profiling and behavioural investigative<br />

advice 5. The Cognitive Expertise of BIAs 6. The Cognitive<br />

Expertise of Geographic Profilers 7. Familial DNA<br />

Prioritisation 8. Child Pornography Offenders: Towards an<br />

Evidenced Based Approach to Prioritizing the Investigation of<br />

Indecent Image Offences Part 2: Professionalizing the<br />

Product Introduction 9. What do SIOs Want? 10.<br />

Interpreting Claims in Offender Profiles: The Role of<br />

Probability Phrases, Base-rates and Perceived Dangerousness<br />

11. Stereotyping, Congruence and Presentation Order:<br />

Interpretative Biases in Utilizing Offender Profiles<br />

12. An Evaluation and Comparison of Claims Made in<br />

Behavioural Investigative Advice Reports Compiled by the<br />

National Policing Improvements Agency in the United<br />

Kingdom 13. Conclusions and Next Steps<br />

April 2011: 234 x 156: 296pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-66878-1: $140.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-66879-8: $49.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415668798<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Techniques of Crime Scene<br />

Investigation First<br />

International Edition<br />

William Tilstone, Forensic Science Solutions<br />

International, USA, Michael Hastrup, National<br />

Centre of Forensic Services, Denmark, Camilla Hald,<br />

Politiets Videnscenter, Denmark and Barry J. Fisher,<br />

Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, USA<br />

Filled with color photos, the book focuses on the<br />

scientific and analytical investigations undertaken by<br />

police forces and other agencies, at the crime scene and<br />

in the laboratory. It includes case studies, applicable law<br />

and investigative procedures that are geared toward UK<br />

proceedings. A plethora of ancillary material is available<br />

to professors with qualifying course adoption.<br />

July 2012: 254 x 178: 600pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-4398-1704-9: $99.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781439817049<br />

47


48<br />

NEW<br />

FORENSIC CRIMINOLOGY<br />

2nd Edition<br />

Practical Crime Scene<br />

Processing and Investigation,<br />

Second Edition<br />

Ross M. Gardner, U.S. Army Criminal Investigation<br />

Command (Retired), USA<br />

Series: Practical Aspects of Criminal & Forensic<br />

Investigations<br />

All too often, the weakest link<br />

in the chain of criminal justice is<br />

the crime scene investigation.<br />

Improper collection of evidence<br />

blocks the finding of truth. Now<br />

in its second edition, Practical<br />

Crime Scene Processing and<br />

Investigation presents practical,<br />

proven methods to be used at<br />

any crime scene to ensure that<br />

evidence is admissible and<br />

persuasive.<br />

Accompanied by more than 300<br />

color photographs, topics discussed include:<br />

• understanding the nature of physical evidence,<br />

including fingerprint, biological, trace, hair and fiber,<br />

and other forms of evidence<br />

• actions of the responding officer, from documenting<br />

and securing the initial information to providing<br />

emergency care<br />

• assessing the scene, including search considerations<br />

and dealing with chemical and bioterror hazards<br />

• crime scene photography, sketching, mapping, and<br />

<strong>note</strong>s and reports<br />

• light technology and preserving fingerprint and<br />

impression evidence<br />

• shooting scene documentation and reconstruction<br />

• bloodstain pattern analysis and the body as a crime<br />

scene<br />

• special scene considerations, including fire, buried<br />

bodies, and entomological evidence<br />

• the role of crime scene analysis and reconstruction,<br />

with step-by-step procedures.<br />

Two appendices provide additional information on crime<br />

scene equipment and risk management, and each<br />

chapter is enhanced by a succinct summary, suggested<br />

readings, and a series of questions to test assimilation of<br />

the material. Using this book in your investigations will<br />

help you find out what happened and who is<br />

responsible.<br />

Selected Contents: Introduction. Understanding the<br />

Nature of Physical Evidence. Actions of the Initial<br />

Responding Officer. Processing Methodology. Assessing the<br />

Scene. Crime Scene Photography. Crime Scene Sketching<br />

and Mapping. Narrative Descriptions: Crime Scene Notes<br />

and Reports. Basic Skills for Scene Processing. Shooting<br />

Scene Documentation and Reconstruction. Applying<br />

Bloodstain Pattern Analysis in the Crime Scene. The Body as<br />

a Crime Scene. Special Scene Considerations. The Role of<br />

Crime Scene Analysis and Reconstruction. Appendix A:<br />

Crime Scene Equipment. Appendix B: Risk Management.<br />

Index<br />

January 2012: 254 x 178: 498pp<br />

Hb: 978-1-4398-5302-3: $89.95<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9781439853023<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

2nd Edition<br />

Psychology and Crime<br />

An Introduction to Criminological<br />

Psychology<br />

Clive Hollin, University of Leicester, UK<br />

The second edition of this<br />

classic text, originally published<br />

in 1989, has been completely<br />

rewritten, to comprehensively<br />

cover the vital role that<br />

psychological theories and<br />

methods continue to play in the<br />

understanding and<br />

management of crime. Crime is<br />

an expensive aspect of society,<br />

and each year millions of<br />

pounds of public money is<br />

spent on services such as the<br />

courts, police and probation services, and prisons, while<br />

the human costs in terms of pain, fear and loss is<br />

incalculable.<br />

The book analyzes the application of psychological<br />

findings to an expansive range of crimes such as arson,<br />

sexual and violent crime and crimes committed by<br />

people with a mental disorder. It also looks at the use of<br />

psychology in the work of the police and the courts, and<br />

in its concluding part, discusses the role of psychology in<br />

crime reduction strategies such as situational crime<br />

prevention and offender rehabilitation.<br />

This book will be of value to students, both<br />

undergraduate and postgraduate, in psychology,<br />

criminology, sociology and related subjects. It will also<br />

provide a valuable resource for professional training<br />

courses and those planning careers in the criminal justice<br />

system.<br />

September 2012: 216 x 138: 300pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-49703-9: $75.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-49702-2: $32.50<br />

For more information, visit:<br />

www.routledge.com/9780415497022<br />

FORENSIC CRIMINOLOGY BACKLIST<br />

TITLE AUTHOR(S)/EDITOR(S) PUB<br />

DATE<br />

Forensic Psychology Edited by Joanna R. Adler<br />

and Jacqueline M Gray<br />

Forensic Psychology in<br />

Context<br />

Handbook of Forensic<br />

Science<br />

FORTHCOMING IN 2012<br />

Crime Scenes<br />

Forensics and Aesthetics<br />

Rebecca Scott Bray, University of Sydney, Australia<br />

Focusing upon the representations that take place in<br />

law, forensic medicine, criminology and culture, Crime<br />

Scenes examines the ways in which knowledge about<br />

crime, death and the dead body is produced.<br />

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. A History of Law’s<br />

Life with the Corpse 3. Picturing Crime and Police<br />

Photography: In Love with Law’s Images 4. Truancy: The<br />

Cultural Life of Legal Pictures 5. Letters from the Dead<br />

House: Forensic Pathology and the Mortuary 6. The Trouble<br />

with Testimony 7. Law’s Lacunae 8. The Aesthetic Life of<br />

Law’s Corpses 9. Conclusion<br />

April 2012: 234 x 156: 240pp<br />

Hb: 978-0-415-48390-2: $125.00<br />

Pb: 978-0-415-48391-9: $41.95<br />

eBook: 978-0-203-09139-5<br />

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September 2012: 229 x 152: 192pp<br />

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A<br />

Adolescence and Society Series .........................7<br />

Advances in Police Theory and Practice (series) .........10, 20<br />

Age of Imprisonment ...............................29<br />

Akers, Timothy A. ..................................30<br />

Albertson, Kevin ...................................30<br />

Albrechtslund, Anders ...............................18<br />

Alison, Laurence ...................................47<br />

Allard, Troy .......................................44<br />

Alred, Deborah ....................................47<br />

Amster, Randall ....................................23<br />

Anderson, Tammy L. ................................45<br />

Andresen, Martin A. ................................46<br />

Anthony, Thalia ....................................10<br />

Applied Statistics for the Social and Health Sciences ........11<br />

Arhin, Antonela ...................................41<br />

Arthur, Raymond. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44<br />

Asencio, Emily K. ..................................11<br />

Ashford, Chris .....................................24<br />

B<br />

Back, Les .........................................13<br />

Baert, Partick .....................................20<br />

Bail .............................................36<br />

Bajc, Vida ........................................20<br />

Baldry, Anna Costanza ..............................43<br />

Ball, Kirstie ........................................9<br />

Barberet, Rosemary ..................................8<br />

Barclay, Elaine .....................................38<br />

Barrie, David G. ....................................42<br />

Barton, Adrian .....................................5<br />

Bas, Ralph ........................................30<br />

Basics (series) ......................................9<br />

Bateman, Tim .....................................30<br />

Bayens, Gerald J. ...................................34<br />

Beaver, Kevin M ...................................46<br />

Bennett, Jamie ....................................34<br />

Benson, Michael .................................7, 19<br />

Bergoffen, Debra B. .............................15, 19<br />

Beyens, Kristel .....................................30<br />

Beyond Bad Girls ...................................13<br />

Biagi-Chai, Francesca ...............................38<br />

Bibbings, Lois .....................................43<br />

Binding Men ......................................43<br />

Biosocial Criminology ...............................46<br />

Birzer, Michael L. ...................................34<br />

Boersma, Kees ....................................18<br />

Bottoms, Anthony ..................................44<br />

Bovarnick, Silvie ....................................7<br />

Bradford, Ben .....................................25<br />

Brayford, Jo ......................................31<br />

Breaking the Wall of Silence ...........................7<br />

Brents, Barbara G. ..................................13<br />

Briggs, Daniel .....................................17<br />

Brightman, Hank J. ..................................7<br />

Brightman, Sara ...................................12<br />

Brisman, Avi .......................................9<br />

Brogden, Mike ....................................27<br />

Broomhall, Susan ..................................42<br />

Brown, Jennifer M. .................................39<br />

Brown, Sally ......................................44<br />

Browne-Marshall, Gloria J. ...........................14<br />

Brownridge, Douglas A. .............................13<br />

Bryant, Clifton D. ...................................8<br />

Builders ..........................................17<br />

Burke, Lol ........................................43<br />

Burke, Mary C. ....................................40<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

C<br />

Calverley, Adam ...................................18<br />

Cambridge Criminal Justice Series ......................44<br />

Canton, Rob ......................................32<br />

Caringella, Susan ..................................12<br />

Carpenter, Belinda .................................12<br />

Carr, Nicola ........................................5<br />

Carrabine, Eamonn ..................................5<br />

Casey, Sharon .....................................18<br />

Changing Lives, Changing Drug Journeys ................17<br />

Changing Police Theories ............................24<br />

Changing Times for Black Professionals ..................12<br />

Chappell, Duncan ..................................28<br />

Chesney-Lind, Meda ................................13<br />

City, Street and Citizen ..............................17<br />

Cochrane, John .....................................5<br />

Cockcroft, Tom ....................................24<br />

Cold Case Homicide ................................48<br />

Community Policing ................................27<br />

Comparative Criminal Justice ..........................30<br />

Conflict and Crisis Communication .....................17<br />

Conflict, Citizenship and Civil Society ...................20<br />

Confronting Global Gender Justice .....................15<br />

Contemporary Anarchist Studies .......................23<br />

Contemporary Critical Criminology ......................9<br />

Contemporary Critical Theory and Methodology ...........12<br />

Contemporary Sociological Perspectives (series) ..........11,13<br />

Contesting the Politics of Genocidal Rape ................19<br />

Conway, Vicky ....................................26<br />

Copes, Heith .......................................6<br />

Corporate Criminal, The .............................20<br />

Corrections .....................................4, 35<br />

Cowe, Francis .....................................31<br />

Cox, Pam .........................................5<br />

Crack Cocaine Users ................................17<br />

Crawford, Adam ...................................31<br />

Crawley, Elaine M. .................................29<br />

Crewe, Ben .......................................34<br />

Crime and Crime Reduction ...........................8<br />

Crime and Criminal Justice ............................5<br />

Crime and Economics ...............................30<br />

Crime and Society Series .............................39<br />

Crime and Terrorism Risk .............................27<br />

Crime and the Lifecourse ............................19<br />

Crime Prevention ..................................27<br />

Crime Scenes .....................................48<br />

Crime Science Series ................................46<br />

Crime, Policy and the Media ..........................38<br />

Criminal Justice .....................................4<br />

Criminal Justice Series ...............................32<br />

Criminal Justice Theory ............................7, 35<br />

Criminal Law, Second Edition .........................34<br />

Criminal Major Case Management .....................27<br />

Criminal Procedure & Sentencing ......................34<br />

Criminal Recidivism .................................17<br />

Criminological Perspectives on Race and Crime ............13<br />

Criminology .....................................3, 5<br />

Criminology and Justice Studies<br />

(series) ..............6, 7, 13, 14, 16, 19, 27, 35, 36,40, 46<br />

Criminology: The Basics ...............................9<br />

Critical Concepts in Criminology (series) ..............23, 37<br />

Cultures of Desistance ...............................18<br />

Cushman, Thomas ..................................8<br />

D<br />

INDEX<br />

Dalton, Derek .....................................26<br />

Dangerousness, Risk and the Governance of Serious Sexual and<br />

Violent Offenders ................................30<br />

Davidson, Julia ....................................41<br />

Davies, Jason .....................................47<br />

Day, Andrew ......................................18<br />

de Lint, Willem ....................................20<br />

Debeljak, Julie .....................................41<br />

Deering, John .....................................31<br />

Deflem, Mathieu ...................................27<br />

DeKeseredy, Walter S. ..............................8, 9<br />

Delage, Christian ..................................20<br />

DeLeon, Abraham ..................................23<br />

Delinquency Theories ...............................45<br />

Dennison, Susan ...................................44<br />

Dictionary of Criminal Justice, A .......................34<br />

Dirks, Danielle .....................................23<br />

Disability, Hate Crime and Violence .....................16<br />

Discourses of Law (series) .........................20, 48<br />

Doig, Alan .......................................39<br />

Doing Justice to Young People ........................43<br />

Domestic Violence and Criminal Justice ..................38<br />

Doyle, Aaron ......................................18<br />

Dragiewicz, Molly ...................................8<br />

Dravers, Phillip ....................................38<br />

Drenkhahn, Kirstin .................................31<br />

Drennan, Gerard ...................................47<br />

Dudeck, Manuela ..................................31<br />

Due Process Denied: Detentions and Deportations in the United<br />

States .........................................19<br />

Duffee, David ......................................7<br />

Dullum, Jane ......................................32<br />

Dumortier, Els .....................................33<br />

Dünkel, Frieder ....................................31<br />

Dwyer, Angela ....................................12<br />

E<br />

Easton, Susan .....................................32<br />

Edelbacher, Maximillian ..............................10<br />

Edwards, Charles ..................................24<br />

Effective Practice in Youth Justice ......................44<br />

Ekland-Olson, Sheldon ..............................23<br />

Electronically Monitored Punishment ....................30<br />

Endangered Children ...............................40<br />

Environmental Criminology and Crime Analysis ............46<br />

Epidemiological Criminology ..........................30<br />

Ethnography and the City ............................23<br />

European Developments in Corporate Criminal Liability ......19<br />

Evidence Based Policy and Practice in Youth Justice .........44<br />

Evolution and Crime .................................7<br />

Eyes Everywhere ...................................18<br />

F<br />

Fafinski, Stefan ....................................39<br />

Farrell, Graham ....................................46<br />

Farrington, David P. ..............................17, 44<br />

Feagin, Joe R. ..................................13, 14<br />

Feminist Criminology ................................15<br />

Fenstermaker, Sarah ................................11<br />

Fernandez, Luis .................................23, 36<br />

Fifty Key Thinkers in Criminology .......................42<br />

Financial Crimes ...................................10<br />

Finch, Emily .......................................39<br />

Finn, Rachel L .....................................18<br />

Fisher, Barry J. .....................................47<br />

Fisher, Martin .....................................17<br />

Fisher’s Techniques of Crime Scene Investigation<br />

First International Edition ...........................47<br />

Ford, Michele .....................................39<br />

Forensic Criminology ................................46<br />

Foundations of Offender Rehabilitation ..................18<br />

Fox, Chris ........................................30<br />

Framing 21st Century Social Issues (series). . . . . . . . . . 19, 23, 45<br />

Froestad, Jan ......................................20<br />

Fuchs, Christian ...................................18<br />

49


50<br />

G<br />

INDEX<br />

Gabbidon, Shaun L. .............................13, 16<br />

Gannon, Theresa A. .................................8<br />

Gao, Huan .......................................12<br />

Gardner, Ross M. ..................................48<br />

Geberth, Vernon J. .................................28<br />

Gender and Crime .................................37<br />

Gilbert, Paula Ruth .................................15<br />

Giller, Henri .......................................44<br />

GIS and Spatial Analysis for the Social Sciences ............11<br />

Globalisation and the Challenge to Criminology ............7<br />

Gobert, James .....................................19<br />

Golash-Boza, Tanya .................................19<br />

Goldson, Barry ....................................45<br />

Goodrich, Peter ....................................20<br />

Goold, Benjamin ...................................23<br />

Gordon, Rachel A. .................................11<br />

Gover, Angela .....................................15<br />

Groves, Nicola .....................................38<br />

Guide to Surviving a Career in Academia, A ..............12<br />

Gun Crime in Global Contexts .........................38<br />

H<br />

Haggerty, Kevin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9<br />

Hald, Camilla .....................................47<br />

Hall, Matthew .....................................22<br />

Hall, Suzanne .....................................17<br />

Hamerton, Christopher ..............................41<br />

Handbook of Crime Prevention and Community Safety ......24<br />

Handbook of Human Rights ...........................8<br />

Handbook of Policing ...............................24<br />

Handbook on Sexual Violence .........................39<br />

Harrison, Karen ....................................30<br />

Harvey Wingfield, Adia ..............................12<br />

Harvey, Tamara ....................................15<br />

Harvey-Wingfield, Adia ..............................14<br />

Hassan, Riaz ...................................20, 38<br />

Hastrup, Michael L. .................................47<br />

Hausbeck, Kathryn .................................13<br />

Hayes, Sharon .....................................12<br />

Hayward, Keith ....................................42<br />

Hazel, Neal .......................................43<br />

Hebenton, Bill .....................................27<br />

Henham, Ralph ....................................22<br />

Hipple, Natalie Kroovand ............................35<br />

History of Police and Masculinities, 1700–2010, A .........42<br />

History of Youth Justice, A ...........................43<br />

Hoffmann, John P. ..................................45<br />

Hohl, Katrin ......................................25<br />

Hollin, Clive ......................................48<br />

Hoover, L. Wayne ..................................28<br />

Hopeful Girls, Troubled Boys ..........................14<br />

Hopkins-Burke, Roger .............................4, 35<br />

How Ethical Systems Change: Lynching and Capital<br />

Punishment .....................................23<br />

Howells, Kevin ....................................47<br />

Hucklesby, Anthea ..............................31, 36<br />

Huey, Laura .......................................36<br />

Human Trafficking. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21, 40<br />

Hungerford-Welch, Peter ............................34<br />

Hynes, Patricia .....................................7<br />

I<br />

Identity Theft .....................................39<br />

Incarcerating Children ...............................30<br />

Indigenous People, Crime and Punishment ...............10<br />

Intelligence and Intelligence Analysis ....................25<br />

Intelligence-led Policing ..............................25<br />

International Perspectives on Child Victimisation ...........41<br />

International Series on Desistance and Rehabilitation (series) 18, 21<br />

Internet and Surveillance .............................18<br />

Interpreting Human Rights ...........................20<br />

Introduction to Criminological Theory, An .................4<br />

Ireland, Carol A. ...................................17<br />

Irwin, John .......................................35<br />

Irwin, Katherine ...................................13<br />

Isser, Natalie K. ....................................40<br />

Issues in Forensic Psychology (series) ....................47<br />

J<br />

Jackson, Crystal A. .................................13<br />

Jackson, Jonathan ..................................25<br />

Jani, Jayshree .....................................23<br />

Jeffreys, Elaine ....................................18<br />

John, Tim ........................................26<br />

Johns, Nick ........................................5<br />

Johnson, Paul .....................................26<br />

Johnstone, Gerry ................................22, 29<br />

Johnstone, Lorraine .................................47<br />

Jones, Carol ......................................38<br />

Jones, Nikki .......................................11<br />

Joyce, Peter .....................................4, 34<br />

Just Authority? ....................................25<br />

Justice and Governance in East Timor ...................35<br />

Justice Reinvestment ................................30<br />

Juvenile Justice Administration ........................33<br />

K<br />

Kaminski, Dan .....................................30<br />

Kapardis, Andreas ..................................43<br />

Kempa, Michael ...................................28<br />

Kennedy, Leslie W. ..............................27, 36<br />

Keren-Paz, Tsachi ..................................40<br />

Key Ideas in Criminology (series) .............8, 9, 15, 20, 27<br />

Key Readings in Criminology ...........................3<br />

Kinney, J. Bryan ....................................46<br />

Klofas, John ......................................35<br />

Kneebone, Susan ..................................41<br />

Koniordos, Sokratis M. ..............................20<br />

Kratcoski, Peter C. ..............................10, 33<br />

L<br />

Labour Migration and Human Trafficking in Southeast Asia ...39<br />

Labour Migration, Human Trafficking and Multinational<br />

Corporations ....................................41<br />

Lee, Maggy ........................................5<br />

Legitimacy and Compliance in Criminal Justice ............31<br />

Leman-Langlois, Stéphane ...........................31<br />

Lenning, Emily ....................................12<br />

Lewis, Rhobert ....................................26<br />

Liebling, Alison ....................................33<br />

Life as a Weapon ..................................38<br />

Lifers ............................................35<br />

Linneman, Thomas J. ...............................11<br />

Lippert, Randy .....................................18<br />

Loader, Ian .......................................20<br />

Logan, Caroline ...................................47<br />

Long-Term Imprisonment and Human Rights ..............31<br />

Lopez, Nancy .....................................14<br />

Lösel, Friedrich ....................................44<br />

Lyon, David .....................................9, 18<br />

Lyons, Lenore .....................................39<br />

M<br />

Madinger, John ....................................41<br />

Maguire, Edward R. .................................7<br />

Maher, JaneMaree .................................18<br />

Mair, George. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33, 43<br />

Managing Clinical Risk ..............................47<br />

Marks, Monique ...................................28<br />

Marsh, Ian ........................................5<br />

Martellozzo, Elena .................................28<br />

Maruna, Shadd ....................................42<br />

Mason-Bish, Hannah ................................16<br />

Mawby, Rob ......................................38<br />

Mazerolle, Lorraine .................................46<br />

McCahill, Michael ..................................18<br />

McCulloch, Jude ...................................18<br />

McGarrell, Edmund F. ............................27, 35<br />

McGloin, Jean Marie ................................36<br />

McGuire, Michael ..................................33<br />

McIvor, Gill .......................................34<br />

McNeely, Connie L. .................................15<br />

McNeill, Fergus ....................................32<br />

Melville, Gaynor ....................................5<br />

Metropolis and Modern Life (series) ....................23<br />

Miller, Susan ......................................15<br />

Money Laundering .................................41<br />

Mooney, Jayne ....................................42<br />

Morgan, Keith .....................................5<br />

Morgan, Rhiannon .................................20<br />

Moston, Stephen ..................................26<br />

Complimentary Exam Copy e-Inspection New in Paperback Companion Website<br />

N<br />

Nellis, Mike .......................................30<br />

Nemeth, Charles P. .................................34<br />

Nevins, Joseph ....................................15<br />

New Criminal Justice, The ............................35<br />

Newburn, Tim ................................3, 24, 26<br />

Nixon, Rod .......................................35<br />

Nocella, II, Anthony J. ...............................23<br />

Norris, Gareth ......................................5<br />

O<br />

O’Brien, Kate .....................................17<br />

Ocejo, Richard ....................................23<br />

Offender Rehabilitation and Therapeutic Communities ......21<br />

Offender Supervision ...............................32<br />

Offending Girls ....................................44<br />

Online Child Sexual Abuse ...........................28<br />

Operation Gatekeeper and Beyond .....................15<br />

Organised Child Sexual Abuse .........................40<br />

P<br />

Pakes, Francis ...................................7, 30<br />

Palmiotto, Michael J. ................................27<br />

Parker, Robert Nash. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11<br />

Pascal, Ana-Maria ..................................19<br />

Patterns, Prevention, and Geometry of Crime .............46<br />

Patterson, George T. ................................36<br />

Pearce, Jenny ......................................7<br />

Pease, Ken .....................................7, 27<br />

Penal Exceptionalism? ...............................32<br />

Perrin, Benjamin ...................................21<br />

Pickering, Sharon ..................................18<br />

Plummer, Ken ......................................5<br />

Pogrebin, Mark .....................................6<br />

Police Cultures ....................................24<br />

Police Custody ....................................25<br />

Police in an Age of Austerity?, The .....................27<br />

Police Interviewing .................................26<br />

Police Practice and Research (series) ....................28<br />

Police Reform from the Bottom Up .....................28<br />

Police Responses to People with Mental Illnesses ...........28<br />

Police Work ......................................26<br />

Policing ..........................................28<br />

Policing of Terrorism, The ............................27<br />

Policing Sex .......................................26<br />

Policing Twentieth Century Ireland .....................26<br />

Policing: Key Readings ..............................26<br />

Policy Making Process in the Criminal Justice System, The .....5<br />

Politics of Organised Crime, The .......................23<br />

Practical Aspects of Criminal & Forensic Investigations<br />

(series) ......................................28, 48<br />

Practical Aspects of Interview and Interrogation,<br />

Third Edition ....................................28<br />

Practical Crime Scene Processing and Investigation,<br />

Second Edition ..................................48<br />

Price, David .......................................33<br />

Principles of Leadership and Management in Law<br />

Enforcement ....................................34<br />

Prison Officer, The ..................................33<br />

Prison Policy in Ireland ...............................22<br />

Prisoner, The ......................................34<br />

Prisoners’ Rights ...................................32<br />

Probation .....................................32, 33<br />

Problem of Pleasure, The .............................38


Procacci, Giovanna .................................20<br />

Professionalizing Offender Profiling .....................47<br />

Prostitution Scandals in China .........................18<br />

Psychological Criminology ............................46<br />

Psychology and Crime ...............................48<br />

Public Criminology? ................................20<br />

Public Sex and the Law ..............................24<br />

Q<br />

Quayle, Ethel .....................................39<br />

Quayson, Ato .....................................41<br />

Quirk, Hannah ....................................24<br />

R<br />

Race, Law, and American Society ......................14<br />

Racist America ....................................13<br />

Rainbow, Lee .....................................47<br />

Ratcliffe, Jerry H. ...................................25<br />

Raynor, Peter. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32<br />

Read, Tim ........................................26<br />

Reasoning Criminologist, The .........................46<br />

Redemption, Rehabilitation and Risk Management .........43<br />

Registration and Monitoring of Sex Offenders, The .........22<br />

Regression Analysis for the Social Sciences ...............11<br />

Reichel, Philip .....................................21<br />

Reisch, Michael ....................................23<br />

Renzetti, Claire M. .................................15<br />

Research in Practice for Forensic Professionals .............47<br />

Researching Crime and Justice .........................7<br />

Resisting Punitiveness in Europe? ......................33<br />

Restorative Justice ..................................22<br />

Restorative Justice in Practice .........................22<br />

Restorative Justice Reader, A ..........................29<br />

Rethinking Policing and Justice ........................36<br />

Ribisl, Kurt M. .....................................39<br />

Right to Silence, The ................................24<br />

Risk Assessment for Juvenile Violent Offending ............43<br />

Roach, Jason .......................................7<br />

Roberson, Cliff ....................................34<br />

Robinson, Gwen ...................................22<br />

Rogan, Mary ......................................22<br />

Rogers, Colin .....................................26<br />

Roulstone, Alan ...................................16<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Advances in Criminology (series) .........12, 19, 20<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Advances in Disability Studies (series) ...........16<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Advances in Ethnography (series) ..............17<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Advances in Sociology (series) .................20<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Contemporary Southeast Asia Series. . . . . . . . . 35, 39<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Frontiers of Criminal Justice (series) ..........30, 31<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Handbook of Critical Criminology ...............8<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Handbook of Deviant Behavior .................8<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Handbook of International Criminology ..........8<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Handbook of Surveillance Studies ...............9<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> International Handbook of Crime and Gender<br />

Studies ........................................15<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> International Handbook of Green Criminology .....9<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> International Handbook of Social Justice .........23<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> International Handbooks (series) ...........8, 9, 15<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Research in Gender and Society (series) .........18<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> SOLON Explorations in Crime and Criminal Justice<br />

Histories (series) ..................................26<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Student Readers (series) .....................13<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Studies in Crime and Society (series) ............18<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Studies in Science, Technology and Society (series) . 18<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Studies on China in Transition (series) ...........18<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong> Transnational Crime and Corruption (series) ...23, 41<br />

<strong>Routledge</strong>/ESA Studies in European Societies (series) ........20<br />

Rumgay, Judith ....................................33<br />

Rumney, Philip ....................................39<br />

Ruzza, Carlo ......................................20<br />

S<br />

Salter, Michael ....................................40<br />

Sandoval, Marisol ..................................18<br />

Scene of the Mass Crime, The .........................20<br />

Schwartz, Lita Linzer ................................40<br />

Scott Bray, Rebecca .................................48<br />

Scoular, Jane ......................................23<br />

Secure Recovery ...................................47<br />

Security ...........................................8<br />

Security and Everyday Life ............................20<br />

Security Governance, Policing, and Local Capacity ..........20<br />

Sentencing and the Legitimacy of Trial Justice .............22<br />

Serial Killers ......................................38<br />

Sex, Crime and Morality .............................12<br />

Sex For Sale ......................................13<br />

Sex Offenders: Punish, Help, Change or Control? ..........31<br />

Sex Trafficking. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40<br />

Sex Work, Labour and Mobility ........................18<br />

Sex, Drugs, and Death ..............................45<br />

Seymour, Mairéad ..................................31<br />

Shannon, Deric ....................................23<br />

Shapland, Joanna ..................................22<br />

Sharpe, Gilly ......................................44<br />

Shearing, Clifford D. .............................20, 28<br />

Sheehan, Rosemary .................................34<br />

Shefer, Guy .......................................33<br />

Sheldon, Kerry ....................................47<br />

Shortcuts (series) ...................................30<br />

Silverman, Jon .....................................38<br />

Simpson, Sally S. ....................................7<br />

Skinns, Layla ......................................25<br />

Sklansky, David ....................................28<br />

Smith, Cindy J. .....................................8<br />

Smith, Roger ......................................43<br />

Snacken, Sonja ....................................33<br />

Social Class and Crime ..............................12<br />

Social Research Today (series) .........................12<br />

Social Statistics ....................................11<br />

Social Work Practice in the Criminal Justice System .........36<br />

Sociologists Backstage ..............................11<br />

Sociology of Terrorism, The ...........................19<br />

Solomos, John ....................................13<br />

Sorsby, Angela ....................................22<br />

South, Nigel .....................................5, 9<br />

Space, Place, and Violence ...........................14<br />

Sparks, Richard .................................20, 29<br />

Spencer, Stephen ..................................11<br />

Squires, Peter .....................................38<br />

Stanko, Betsy .....................................25<br />

Stanley, Elizabeth ..................................18<br />

State Crime .......................................39<br />

State Crime and Resistance ...........................18<br />

State of Sex, The ...................................13<br />

Stephenson, Martin ................................44<br />

Stevens, Alisa .....................................21<br />

Stewart, Anna .....................................44<br />

Stinchcomb, Jeanne B. ..............................35<br />

Strydom, Piet .....................................12<br />

Sturman, Shane G. .................................28<br />

Subject of Prostitution, The ...........................23<br />

Suicide Bombings ..................................20<br />

Sullivan, Christopher J. ..............................36<br />

Surveillance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23<br />

Surveillance, Capital and Resistance ....................18<br />

BROWSE AND ORDER ONLINE: www.routledge.com/criminology<br />

T<br />

Tac .............................................17<br />

Technocrime: Policing and Surveillance ..................31<br />

Technology, Crime and Justice .........................33<br />

Theil, Michael .....................................10<br />

Theories of Race and Racism ..........................13<br />

Theory of African American Offending, A ................16<br />

Thiel, Darren ......................................17<br />

Thomas, Terry ..................................22, 38<br />

Tilley, Nick .....................................24, 46<br />

Tilstone, William J. .................................47<br />

Today’s White Collar Crime ............................7<br />

Tombs, Steve ......................................20<br />

Torturing Terrorists .................................39<br />

Transcending Taboos ................................10<br />

Transnational Crime and Human Rights ..................41<br />

Transnational Environmental Crime .....................40<br />

INDEX<br />

Trotter, Chris ...................................32, 34<br />

Turner, Bryan ......................................20<br />

Turpin-Petrosino, Carolyn .............................9<br />

Tyner, James A. ....................................14<br />

U<br />

Ugelvik, Thomas ...................................32<br />

Understanding and Preventing Online Sexual Exploitation of<br />

Children .......................................39<br />

Understanding Criminal Justice .........................5<br />

Understanding Hate Crimes ...........................9<br />

Unnever, James D.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16<br />

V<br />

van Schendel, Willem ...............................39<br />

Vecchi, Gregory M. .................................17<br />

Vertigans, Stephen .................................19<br />

Vess, Jim .........................................18<br />

Victims and Policy-Making ...........................22<br />

Violence Against Women ............................13<br />

Visual Research Methods in the Social Sciences ............11<br />

Voices from Criminal Justice ...........................6<br />

Voruz, Veronique ..................................38<br />

W<br />

Wahidin, Azrini .....................................5<br />

Wain, Neil ........................................34<br />

Walklate, Sandra ..............................9, 37, 39<br />

Walsh, Anthony ................................12, 46<br />

Walsh, Patrick F. ...................................25<br />

Waltermaurer, Eve ..................................30<br />

Walton, Richard H. .................................48<br />

Ward, Tony .......................................18<br />

Weitzer, Ronald ....................................13<br />

Welch, Michael .....................................4<br />

Westmarland, Louise .................................7<br />

When Crime Appears ...............................36<br />

White Collar Crime ..................................7<br />

White Racial Frame, The .............................14<br />

White, Rob .......................................40<br />

Whitty, Monica ....................................10<br />

Whyte, David .....................................20<br />

Wicklander, Douglas E. ..............................28<br />

Williams, Andrew ..................................46<br />

Williams, Lisa .....................................17<br />

Wilson, Larry ......................................27<br />

Winterdyk, John ...................................21<br />

Women and Heroin Addiction in China’s Changing Society ...12<br />

Wong, Kevin ......................................30<br />

Wood, Jane .......................................8<br />

Working with Women Offenders in the Community ........34<br />

Wortley, Richard ...................................46<br />

X<br />

Xenakis, Sappho ...................................23<br />

Y<br />

Yes We Can?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14<br />

Young Adult Offenders ..............................44<br />

Young Offenders and the Law ........................44<br />

Young, Garry .....................................10<br />

Youth in Crisis? ....................................45<br />

Youth Justice in Context .............................31<br />

Z<br />

Zara, Georgia .....................................17<br />

Zedner, Lucia. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8<br />

Zhang, Sheldon X. ..................................8<br />

Zulawski, David E. ..................................28<br />

51


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