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Pracademics in Criminal Justice

Edited by: Di Turgoose, Victoria Knight, Darren Woodward

ISBN13: 9781032383057
To be Published: November 2024
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback
Price: £35.99



Providing an in-depth interrogation of the practitioner/academic role within the context of criminal justice, this book outlines the benefits and challenges of different roles through exploring the lived experience of the contributing authors.

Arranged into three comprehensive sections, the book acknowledges the contribution pracademics make to criminal justice, conceptualises pracademia in the criminal justice context, and explores what it means to be a pracademic in a criminal justice setting. Exploring the theoretical, methodological, philosophical, practice and pedagogic value that practical application brings to teaching, learning and research, the book collectively develops a pracademic model framed within the context of criminal justice, which challenges the established ‘historical/traditional’ wisdom of academia with the aim of disrupting traditional knowledge production, contributing to new discussions and highlighting the value of scholarship grounded in practice in criminal justice.

Written and edited by pracademics with extensive criminal justice experience, Pracademics in Criminal Justice will be of value to anyone with an interest in how practice and academia intertwine in a criminal justice setting, including pracademics, academics, practitioners, applied academics, those with lived experience of practice in academia, activists, practivists and students, particularly those undertaking professional programmes, in areas such as policing or probation, or seeking careers as practitioners in the criminal justice system.

Subjects:
Criminal Law, Criminology
Contents:
Foreword
Hazel Kemshall
1. Introduction: Locating pracademics in criminal Justice
Di Turgoose, Victoria Knight and Darren Woodward

PART 1: An Anatomy of the Pracademic in Criminal Justice
2. Applying Anthropology to Culturally-Conscious Criminal Legal Concerns
Caleb D. Sabatka
3. Intrapreneurship and criminal justice: Pracademia with purpose
Jason Morris
4. The Never-ending barriers for the formerly incarcerated pracademic
David Honeywell

PART 2: Pracademic Transitions
5. Learning to Live with Liminality: Reflections of a probation pracademic
Sam Ainslie
6. The role and experiences of Forensic Psychologist pracademics working within a Long Term and High Security prison setting
Alice Bennett and Jenny Tew
7. Pracademia: Lessons to be Learned when Transiting from Practice to Academia
Steve Christopher

PART 3: The Application of Pracademia
8. ‘When you have walked the walk…’ Transitions from prison landings to Higher Education (HE)
Sarah Nixon
9. Operationalising theory: The role of the pracademic in the pedagogy of student police officers
Anne Eason
10. Filling in the gaps: Australian pracademics creating social justice impact in a criminal justice setting
Sara Kowal, Sally Andersen, Jeff Giddings and Jennifer Paneth
11. The challenges of keeping it real: The role of storytelling and digital technology in probation training to explore risk and desistance
Sarah O’Neill
12. Exploring the Potential of Virtual Environments in Addressing Domestic Violence and Abuse in the pracademic classroom
Di Turgoose
13. A Foot in All of the Camps: A Personal Reflection of the Merging of Lived Experience, Practice and Academia
Lucy Baldwin