1st Edition

Confronting Crime Crime control policy under new labour

Edited By Michael Tonry Copyright 2003
    264 Pages
    by Willan

    264 Pages
    by Willan

    From Labour's promise to be 'tough on crime, tough on the causes of crime' through to the White Paper and new criminal justice legislation, controlling crime and reforming the criminal justice system has been one of the government's key priorities.

    This book provides a detailed review of the thinking behind these new plans and legislation, looking at policies and proposals in the field of punishment, particularly those embodied in the Halliday Review of the Sentencing Framework (2001), the government White Paper Justice for All (2002), and the 2002 Criminal Justice Bill. The contributors to the book subject to scrutiny the evidence for the 'evidence-based policy making' that is often claimed as a distinctive new feature to these processes, examining approaches to drug-dependent offenders, dangerous sex offenders, nuisance offenders, procedural and evidential protections in the courts, sentencing guidelines, sentencing management, racism in sentencing, custody plus, custody minus, and reducing the prison population.

    Preface  1. Evidence, Elections and Ideology in the Making of Criminal Justice by Michael Tonry  2. Drug Dependent Offenders and Justice for All by Mike Hough and Darian Mitchell  3. Unprincipled Sentencing? The Policy Approach to Dangerous Sex Offenders by Amanda Matravers and Gareth Hughes  4. Nuisance Offenders: Scooping the Public Policy Problems by Rod Hansen, Larry Bill and Ken Pease  5. Procedural and Evidential Protections in the English Courts by Nicola Padfield and Richard Crowley  6. Sentencing Guidelines by Neil Hutton  7. Sentence Management: A New Role for the Judiciary by Neil McKittrick and Sue Rex  8. Is Sentencing in England and Wales Institutionally Racist? by Amanda Matravers and Michael Tonry  9. Custody Plus, Custody Minus by Jenny Roberts and Michael Smith  10. Reducing the Prison Population by Michael Tonry  11. Justice for All by David Green

    Biography

    Michael Tonry is Professor of Law and Public Policy and Director of the Institute of Criminology, University of Cambridge, and Sonosky Professor of Law and Public Policy, University of Minnesota.