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Criminal Justice and Privatisation: Key Issues and Debates

Edited by: Philip Bean

ISBN13: 9781138330948
Published: June 2020
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback
Price: £34.99



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Over the past few years, opposition to the privatisation in public services in the United Kingdom and elsewhere has grown, especially in areas related to criminal justice. Privatisation has existed within the British criminal justice system at least since the early 1990s, but the privatisation of the Probation Service in 2014 was a significant landmark in this process and signalled a larger programme of privatisation to come.

Criminal Justice and Privatisation works to examine the impact of privatisation on the criminal justice system, and to explore the potential effects of privatising other areas including the police and the security industry. By including chapters from practitioners and academics alike, the book offers an expansive overview of the criminal justice system, as well as observations of the effect of privatisation at ground level. By also exploring the way the private companies are paid, how they operate and what private companies do, this book offers an insight into and the future of privatisation within the public sector.

Written in a clear and direct style this book will appeal to students and scholars in criminology, sociology, cultural studies, social theory and those interested in learning about the effects of privatisation.

Subjects:
Criminal Law
Contents:
Privatisation in Criminal Justice: An Overview
Philip Bean
Probation for Profit: Neoliberalism Magical Thinking and Evidence Refusal
Peter Raynor
Electronic Monitoring, Neoliberalism and the Shaping of Community Sanctions
Mike Nellis
Who Needs Experts? The Commercialisation of the Probation Ideal
Maurice Vanstone?
The Gift Relationship: What We Lose When Rehabilitation is Privatised
Lawrence Burke And Steve Collett
Through the Gate
John Harding
The Role of Payment by Results in Privatising the Probation Service
Russell Webster
Privatisation of Policing
Objective Reform, Ideological Revolution or Subjective Revenge and Retribution?
John Grieve
Private Security and the Privatisation of Criminal Justice
Adam White
Privatisation Marketisation and the Penal Voluntary Sector
Mike Maguire
Contracts, compliance care and control. The experience of privatisation in one probation trust.Contracts compliance care and control: the experience of privatisation in one probation trust.Contracts, Compliance Care and Control: The Experience of Privatisation in One Probation Trust.
Martin Graham
Does it Work? Does it Pay?
Nigel Whiskin
Legitimacy in Probation and the Impact of Transforming Rehabilitation
John Deering
What Does Privatisation Mean for Probation Supervision?
Jane Dominey
Privatisation of Criminal Justice in Eastern Europe
Simonas Nikartis
Privatisation of Criminal Justice in Australia.
Marietta Martinovic, Marg Liddell & David Daley Sessional lecturer, Criminology and Justice, former Director, Community Based Services, Western Australia Department of Justice.
Correctional Privatisation in the United States.
Brett Burkhardt & Story Edison