This paper charts the main changes in security industry regulation in Australia from the 1980s to the present time, and provides a critique of the regulatory framework and the change process. Change has largely been driven by recurring conduct scandals, with governments obliged to introduce increasingly more stringent integrity checks and competency standards in an attempt to diminish widespread concerns about the industry. Despite the lack of strategic planning, a significant learning process is evident and a clear model of best practice has emerged. Recent enquiries show that Australia still does not have an optimal system for managing the industry but change has been in the right direction, with scope for fine-tunin...
This special issue traces multifaceted readings of criminal law reform in the context of development...
One of the striking characteristics of much ‘big picture’ penal scholarship is that it stops at the ...
The private healthcare insurance sector is rarely the subject of criminological analysis unless seen...
Sometimes secrecy in law is required to protect vulnerable witnesses or suppress sensitive evidence....
Over the last three decades, welfare states across the West have embraced a host of new technologies...
Numbers, rates and proportions of those remanded in custody have increased significantly in recent d...
The move towards prevention in domestic anti-terror law and policy was initially justified as an e...
The purpose of this study is to analyze the right to obtain free legal assistance and protection for...
The issue of the lack of confidence in the courts provides an opportunity for us to consider the q...
This article examines the conditions of penal optimism behind suggestions that the penal expansionis...
Active labour market policies are commonly used tool to fight unem‐ ployment. In the late 1970s in m...
Abstract: This article critically examines the New South Wales State Government’s latest policy resp...
Active labour market policies are commonly used tool to fight unemployment. In the late 1970s in mos...
How can the right to be forgotten be understood in the current context determined by the digital soc...
“Explain or change” was a key term that came into currency in the UK from 2016 onwards to put the on...
This special issue traces multifaceted readings of criminal law reform in the context of development...
One of the striking characteristics of much ‘big picture’ penal scholarship is that it stops at the ...
The private healthcare insurance sector is rarely the subject of criminological analysis unless seen...
Sometimes secrecy in law is required to protect vulnerable witnesses or suppress sensitive evidence....
Over the last three decades, welfare states across the West have embraced a host of new technologies...
Numbers, rates and proportions of those remanded in custody have increased significantly in recent d...
The move towards prevention in domestic anti-terror law and policy was initially justified as an e...
The purpose of this study is to analyze the right to obtain free legal assistance and protection for...
The issue of the lack of confidence in the courts provides an opportunity for us to consider the q...
This article examines the conditions of penal optimism behind suggestions that the penal expansionis...
Active labour market policies are commonly used tool to fight unem‐ ployment. In the late 1970s in m...
Abstract: This article critically examines the New South Wales State Government’s latest policy resp...
Active labour market policies are commonly used tool to fight unemployment. In the late 1970s in mos...
How can the right to be forgotten be understood in the current context determined by the digital soc...
“Explain or change” was a key term that came into currency in the UK from 2016 onwards to put the on...
This special issue traces multifaceted readings of criminal law reform in the context of development...
One of the striking characteristics of much ‘big picture’ penal scholarship is that it stops at the ...
The private healthcare insurance sector is rarely the subject of criminological analysis unless seen...