| Título : |
The Palgrave Handbook of Australian and New Zealand Criminology, Crime and Justice |
| Tipo de documento: |
documento electrónico |
| Autores: |
Deckert, Antje, ; Sarre, Rick, |
| Mención de edición: |
1 ed. |
| Editorial: |
[s.l.] : Springer |
| Fecha de publicación: |
2017 |
| Número de páginas: |
XXIX, 916 p. 33 ilustraciones |
| ISBN/ISSN/DL: |
978-3-319-55747-2 |
| Nota general: |
Libro disponible en la plataforma SpringerLink. Descarga y lectura en formatos PDF, HTML y ePub. Descarga completa o por capítulos. |
| Palabras clave: |
Criminología Derechos humanos Criminología crítica Crimen Crimen transnacional Teoría de la criminología Crimen y sociedad |
| Índice Dewey: |
364.01 |
| Resumen: |
Este manual aborda debates clave en la criminología de Australia y Nueva Zelanda durante los últimos 50 años. En seis secciones, que contienen 56 capítulos originales, destacados investigadores y profesionales investigan temas como la historia de la criminología; datos sobre delincuencia y justicia; reforma legal; pandillas; delincuencia juvenil; delitos violentos, de cuello blanco y rurales; cibercrimen; terrorismo; sentencia; Tribunales indígenas; niños testigos e hijos de presos; procesos de denuncia policial; leyes sobre armas; políticas sobre el alcohol; y elaboración de perfiles criminales. Las secciones clave destacan la teoría criminológica y, fundamentalmente, las cuestiones y perspectivas indígenas sobre la justicia penal. Los colaboradores examinan las implicaciones de las tendencias pasadas y actuales en la recopilación de datos oficiales, la política criminal y la investigación académica para desarrollar una comprensión de áreas problemáticas emergentes y poco investigadas para futuras investigaciones. Este manual, un texto autorizado y completo, constituye un recurso necesario y esperado desde hace mucho tiempo para académicos dedicados, analistas de políticas públicas y estudiantes universitarios. |
| Nota de contenido: |
Section I: The crime and justice landscape -- 1. Fifty years of Australian criminology; Duncan Chappell -- 2. A short history of New Zealand criminology; James Rodgers and Philip Stenning -- 3. Public sector criminological research; Russell G Smith -- 4. The Asian and Pacific Conference of Correctional Administrators; David Biles -- 5. Crime and justice data; Fiona Dowsley and Timothy Hart -- 6. Crime, news, and the media; Judy McGregor -- 7. Law reform targeting crime and disorder; Lorana Bartels and Rick Sarre -- Section II: Patterns of crime -- 8. Mapping common crime; Jason Payne and Fiona Hutton -- 9. Violent crime; Stuart Ross and Kenneth Polk -- 10. Commercial armed robbery; Emmeline Taylor -- 11. Outlaw motorcycle gangs; Mark Lauchs and Jarrod Gilbert -- 12. Samoan youth crime; Laumua Tunufa'i -- 13. Domestic violence, violence in close relationships, and violenceagainst women; Samantha Jeffries and Sharon Hayes -- 14. Sexual violence and harassment in the digital era; Anastasia Powell and Nicola Henry -- 15. Cybercrime; Roderic Broadhurst -- 16. Corporate and white collar crime; Fiona Haines -- 17. Corruption; Adam Graycar -- 18. Fraud victimisation and prevention; Tim Prenzler -- 19. Rural crime; Elaine Barclay -- 20. Transnational organised crime, border policing, and refugees; Michael Grewcock -- Section III: State and non-state responses -- 21. A Gallipoli trope on Australian peacekeeping; John Braithwaite -- 22. Terrorism and anti-terrorism laws; Selda Dagistanli and Scott Poynting -- 23. New Zealand penal policy in the twenty-first century; John Pratt -- 24. Sentencing theories, practices, and trends; James C. Oleson -- 25. Indigenous sentencing courts in Australia; Elena Marchetti -- 26. Restorative justice; Masahiro Suzuki and William Wood -- 27. Emotion and language in restorative youth justice; Hennessey Hayes -- 28. Child witnesses in criminal courts; Kirsten Hanna and Emily Henderson -- 29. Children of prisoners; Catherine Flynn and Anna Eriksson -- 30. Redress for historical institutional abuse of children; Kathleen Daly -- 31. Privatisation of criminal justice; Alice Mills -- 32. The third sector in criminal justice; Janet Ransley and Lorraine Mazerolle -- 33. The pluralisation of policing; Trevor Bradley -- 34. Policing and crime policy; Andrew Goldsmith -- 35. The police complaints process; John Buttle and Antje Deckert -- Section IV: Crime and justice through different theoretical lenses -- 36. Strain theory and crime; Li Eriksson and Lisa Broidy -- 37. Developmental and life-course criminology; Paul Mazerolle and Tara Renae McGee -- 38. Left realist criminology; David Brown -- 39. Feminist criminology; Kathryn Henne -- 40. Convict criminology; Greg Newbold -- 41. Green criminology; Rob White and Sarah Wright Monod -- 42. Narrative criminology; Mark Halsey -- 43. Victims, legal consciousness, and legal mobilisation; Robyn Holder -- Section V: Indigenous perspectives on crime and justice -- 44. Indigenous peoples and criminal justice in Australia; Chris Cunneen and Amanda Porter -- 45. Māori experiences of colonisation and Māori criminology; Robert Webb -- 46. Colonial law, dominant discourses, and intergenerational trauma; Rawiri Waretini-Karena -- 47. Rangatahi courts; Khylee Quince -- 48. Māori and prison; Tracey McIntosh and Kim Workman -- 49. Crime and Māori in the media; Simone Bull -- 50. Doing research with the Indigenous domain as a non-Indigenous criminologist; Harry Blagg -- 51. Imagining an Indigenous criminological future; Juan Marcellus Tauri -- Section VI: Crime prevention policies -- 52. Australian gun laws; Philip Alpers -- 53.Alcohol, policies; Joseph M. Boden -- 54. Developmental prevention; Ross Homel and Kate Freiberg -- 55. Rehabilitation programmes in Australian prisons; Karen Heseltine and Andrew Day -- 56. Criminal profiling; Geoff Dean and Sarah Yule. |
| En línea: |
https://link-springer-com.biblioproxy.umanizales.edu.co/referencework/10.1007/97 [...] |
| Link: |
https://biblioteca.umanizales.edu.co/ils/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&i |
The Palgrave Handbook of Australian and New Zealand Criminology, Crime and Justice [documento electrónico] / Deckert, Antje, ; Sarre, Rick, . - 1 ed. . - [s.l.] : Springer, 2017 . - XXIX, 916 p. 33 ilustraciones. ISBN : 978-3-319-55747-2 Libro disponible en la plataforma SpringerLink. Descarga y lectura en formatos PDF, HTML y ePub. Descarga completa o por capítulos.
| Palabras clave: |
Criminología Derechos humanos Criminología crítica Crimen Crimen transnacional Teoría de la criminología Crimen y sociedad |
| Índice Dewey: |
364.01 |
| Resumen: |
Este manual aborda debates clave en la criminología de Australia y Nueva Zelanda durante los últimos 50 años. En seis secciones, que contienen 56 capítulos originales, destacados investigadores y profesionales investigan temas como la historia de la criminología; datos sobre delincuencia y justicia; reforma legal; pandillas; delincuencia juvenil; delitos violentos, de cuello blanco y rurales; cibercrimen; terrorismo; sentencia; Tribunales indígenas; niños testigos e hijos de presos; procesos de denuncia policial; leyes sobre armas; políticas sobre el alcohol; y elaboración de perfiles criminales. Las secciones clave destacan la teoría criminológica y, fundamentalmente, las cuestiones y perspectivas indígenas sobre la justicia penal. Los colaboradores examinan las implicaciones de las tendencias pasadas y actuales en la recopilación de datos oficiales, la política criminal y la investigación académica para desarrollar una comprensión de áreas problemáticas emergentes y poco investigadas para futuras investigaciones. Este manual, un texto autorizado y completo, constituye un recurso necesario y esperado desde hace mucho tiempo para académicos dedicados, analistas de políticas públicas y estudiantes universitarios. |
| Nota de contenido: |
Section I: The crime and justice landscape -- 1. Fifty years of Australian criminology; Duncan Chappell -- 2. A short history of New Zealand criminology; James Rodgers and Philip Stenning -- 3. Public sector criminological research; Russell G Smith -- 4. The Asian and Pacific Conference of Correctional Administrators; David Biles -- 5. Crime and justice data; Fiona Dowsley and Timothy Hart -- 6. Crime, news, and the media; Judy McGregor -- 7. Law reform targeting crime and disorder; Lorana Bartels and Rick Sarre -- Section II: Patterns of crime -- 8. Mapping common crime; Jason Payne and Fiona Hutton -- 9. Violent crime; Stuart Ross and Kenneth Polk -- 10. Commercial armed robbery; Emmeline Taylor -- 11. Outlaw motorcycle gangs; Mark Lauchs and Jarrod Gilbert -- 12. Samoan youth crime; Laumua Tunufa'i -- 13. Domestic violence, violence in close relationships, and violenceagainst women; Samantha Jeffries and Sharon Hayes -- 14. Sexual violence and harassment in the digital era; Anastasia Powell and Nicola Henry -- 15. Cybercrime; Roderic Broadhurst -- 16. Corporate and white collar crime; Fiona Haines -- 17. Corruption; Adam Graycar -- 18. Fraud victimisation and prevention; Tim Prenzler -- 19. Rural crime; Elaine Barclay -- 20. Transnational organised crime, border policing, and refugees; Michael Grewcock -- Section III: State and non-state responses -- 21. A Gallipoli trope on Australian peacekeeping; John Braithwaite -- 22. Terrorism and anti-terrorism laws; Selda Dagistanli and Scott Poynting -- 23. New Zealand penal policy in the twenty-first century; John Pratt -- 24. Sentencing theories, practices, and trends; James C. Oleson -- 25. Indigenous sentencing courts in Australia; Elena Marchetti -- 26. Restorative justice; Masahiro Suzuki and William Wood -- 27. Emotion and language in restorative youth justice; Hennessey Hayes -- 28. Child witnesses in criminal courts; Kirsten Hanna and Emily Henderson -- 29. Children of prisoners; Catherine Flynn and Anna Eriksson -- 30. Redress for historical institutional abuse of children; Kathleen Daly -- 31. Privatisation of criminal justice; Alice Mills -- 32. The third sector in criminal justice; Janet Ransley and Lorraine Mazerolle -- 33. The pluralisation of policing; Trevor Bradley -- 34. Policing and crime policy; Andrew Goldsmith -- 35. The police complaints process; John Buttle and Antje Deckert -- Section IV: Crime and justice through different theoretical lenses -- 36. Strain theory and crime; Li Eriksson and Lisa Broidy -- 37. Developmental and life-course criminology; Paul Mazerolle and Tara Renae McGee -- 38. Left realist criminology; David Brown -- 39. Feminist criminology; Kathryn Henne -- 40. Convict criminology; Greg Newbold -- 41. Green criminology; Rob White and Sarah Wright Monod -- 42. Narrative criminology; Mark Halsey -- 43. Victims, legal consciousness, and legal mobilisation; Robyn Holder -- Section V: Indigenous perspectives on crime and justice -- 44. Indigenous peoples and criminal justice in Australia; Chris Cunneen and Amanda Porter -- 45. Māori experiences of colonisation and Māori criminology; Robert Webb -- 46. Colonial law, dominant discourses, and intergenerational trauma; Rawiri Waretini-Karena -- 47. Rangatahi courts; Khylee Quince -- 48. Māori and prison; Tracey McIntosh and Kim Workman -- 49. Crime and Māori in the media; Simone Bull -- 50. Doing research with the Indigenous domain as a non-Indigenous criminologist; Harry Blagg -- 51. Imagining an Indigenous criminological future; Juan Marcellus Tauri -- Section VI: Crime prevention policies -- 52. Australian gun laws; Philip Alpers -- 53.Alcohol, policies; Joseph M. Boden -- 54. Developmental prevention; Ross Homel and Kate Freiberg -- 55. Rehabilitation programmes in Australian prisons; Karen Heseltine and Andrew Day -- 56. Criminal profiling; Geoff Dean and Sarah Yule. |
| En línea: |
https://link-springer-com.biblioproxy.umanizales.edu.co/referencework/10.1007/97 [...] |
| Link: |
https://biblioteca.umanizales.edu.co/ils/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&i |
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