Available Formats
Criminal Policy in Transition
By (Author) Penny Green
Edited by Andrew Rutherford
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
11th December 2000
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
364.9
Paperback
301
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 15mm
This work arrives at a time when the literature in criminology is short of "global" perspectives. It aims to help fill that gap while it presents important new insights into changing penal policy and practice. The authors write knowledgeably about their home societies without being prematurely bounded by comparative criteria. As a result, they develop a complex and uneven image of similarities and differences, of divergence and convergence through time. In this sense the collection offers a model of how international collaborative work should proceed. The book is the product of a workshop held at the International Institute for the Sociology of Law (IISL) in O ati, Spain. The IISL is a partnership between the Research Committee on the Sociology of Law and the Basque Government
Criminal Policy in Transaction is a fine anthology. Contributing authors provide intersting profiles of criminal justice policy in several countries, speak to issues and themes that are important for our understanding of both crime and criminal punishment, and remind all legal scholars that law and its administration have to be studied in context, both in historical and more gerneral socio-economic terms. Moreover, the authors clearly illustrate the benefit of more international and comparative scrutiny of criminal justice policy and administration. -- Susette M. Talarico * The Law and Politics Book Review *
These contributions are penned by eminent scholars in the criminal policy field and each participant is writing to the very best of their ability.Scheerers meditations upon the nature of an emergent post-modern global empire toward the end of the volume are especially fascinating. -- James Sheptycki * Criminal Justice *
Andrew Rutherford is Dean of the Faculty of Law and Professor of Criminal Justice. Penny Green is a Professor of Law at the University of Westminster.