1st Edition

Urban Crime Prevention, Surveillance, and Restorative Justice Effects of Social Technologies

Edited By Paul Knepper, Jonathan Doak, Joanna Shapland Copyright 2009
    258 Pages 4 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    Crime prevention, surveillance, and restorative justice have transformed the response to crime in recent years. Each has had a significant impact on policy, introducing new concepts and reassessing traditional aims and priorities. While such efforts attract a great deal of criminological interest, they tend to be discussed within separate and discrete literatures, rather than as part of a cohesive and concerted effort. Urban Crime Prevention, Surveillance, and Restorative Justice: Effects of Social Technologies examines these emerging trends which are increasingly being contemplated by police, courts, and corrections agencies, and explores how these three concepts are changing national and international policies concerning crime.

    Going beyond the conventional methods for crime reduction

     

    The book addresses these topics within a larger framework of social technology, defined as coordinated action derived from an organized field of knowledge to achieve a particular result. It focuses on efforts aimed at reducing and responding to crime without reliance on the conventional criminal justice practices of police and prisons. The contributors discuss diffusion of knowledge about crime though media and criminological research, surveillance technologies and their effect on crime, and finally, the concept of restorative justice, with an emphasis on juvenile justice and its relationship to social regulations in general.

    Comprising the contributions of numerous experts in the field of criminology, the book asks "What is the interaction between knowledge, planning, and social repercussions?" The answer to this question forms a valuable basis from which to evaluate proposals for social improvements related to crime.

    Introduction: Social Technology in Criminology: The Relationship Between Criminology and Social Policy

    Print Culture and the Creation of Public Knowledge About Crime in 18th-Century London,

    Robert Shoemaker

    Crime Prevention and the Understanding of Repeat Victimization: A Longitudinal Study,

    Anthony E. Bottoms and Andrew Costello

    In the Frame: 20th-Century Discourses About Representations of Crime in Fictional Media, Chas Critcher

    Fingerprint and Photograph: Surveillance Technologies in the Manufacture of Suspect Social Identities, Paul Knepper and Clive Norris

    Electronically Monitoring Offenders and Penal Innovation in a Telematic Society, Mike Nellis

    Key Elements of Restorative Justice Alongside Adult Criminal Justice, Joanna Shapland

    State, Community, and Transition: Restorative Youth Conferencing in Northern Ireland, Jonathan Doak and David O’Mahony

    Restorative Justice and Antisocial Behavior Interventions as Contractual Governance: Constructing the Citizen Consumer, Adam Crawford

    Restorative Justice: Five Dangers Ahead, Nils Christie

     

    Biography

    Paul Knepper, Jonathan Doak, Joanna Shapland