Despite its dramatic proliferation and diversification in recent decades, supervisory forms of punishment in the community (like probation, parole and unpaid work) have been largely invisible in scholarly and public discussion of criminal justice and its development in late-modern societies. The long-standing pre-occupation with the prison, and more recent concerns about 'mass incarceration' have allowed the emergence of 'mass supervision' to remain in the shadows. Pervasive Punishment insists that we remedy this neglect and exemplifies how we can do so. Drawing on thirty years of personal, practice and research experiences, it offers a compelling and rich account of the scale and social distribution of mass supervision, of the processes...
Throughout much of the western world more and more people are being sent to prison, one of a number ...
Starting around 1974 the nothing works movement became dominant in the United States, and it joined ...
How we should we make sense of sentencing? Despite huge efforts world-wide to analyse, critique and ...
Despite its dramatic proliferation and diversification in recent decades, supervisory forms of punis...
This chapter discusses a pilot study undertaken by one of the working groups of an EU-funded COST Ac...
Community sanctions involving supervision are a neglected field in criminological research and are w...
Book chapter in popular text bookWhen the topic of punishment is discussed, many people think first ...
The 2008 financial crash, and the lessons it teaches us about the costs of unregulated excess, offer...
This book offers an incisive collection of contemporary research into the problems of crime control ...
This paper aims to contribute to debates about ‘mass supervision’ by exploring its penal character a...
Over the last fifteen years, the analytical field of punishment and society has witnessed an increas...
The 2008 financial crash, and the lessons it teaches us about the costs of unregulated excess, offer...
Over the last fifteen years, the analytical field of punishment and society has witnessed an increas...
This chapter explores the diverse ways in which stories of prison and punishment have been told in t...
The 2008 financial crash, and the lessons it teaches us about the costs of unregulated excess, offer...
Throughout much of the western world more and more people are being sent to prison, one of a number ...
Starting around 1974 the nothing works movement became dominant in the United States, and it joined ...
How we should we make sense of sentencing? Despite huge efforts world-wide to analyse, critique and ...
Despite its dramatic proliferation and diversification in recent decades, supervisory forms of punis...
This chapter discusses a pilot study undertaken by one of the working groups of an EU-funded COST Ac...
Community sanctions involving supervision are a neglected field in criminological research and are w...
Book chapter in popular text bookWhen the topic of punishment is discussed, many people think first ...
The 2008 financial crash, and the lessons it teaches us about the costs of unregulated excess, offer...
This book offers an incisive collection of contemporary research into the problems of crime control ...
This paper aims to contribute to debates about ‘mass supervision’ by exploring its penal character a...
Over the last fifteen years, the analytical field of punishment and society has witnessed an increas...
The 2008 financial crash, and the lessons it teaches us about the costs of unregulated excess, offer...
Over the last fifteen years, the analytical field of punishment and society has witnessed an increas...
This chapter explores the diverse ways in which stories of prison and punishment have been told in t...
The 2008 financial crash, and the lessons it teaches us about the costs of unregulated excess, offer...
Throughout much of the western world more and more people are being sent to prison, one of a number ...
Starting around 1974 the nothing works movement became dominant in the United States, and it joined ...
How we should we make sense of sentencing? Despite huge efforts world-wide to analyse, critique and ...