Currency-related crime was endemic in London during the Restriction Period (1797–1821). This article looks at 884 individuals suspected or charged by the Bank of England, and considers how changes in detection strategy affected the prevalence of ethnically Irish people within that list of suspects. It rejects an anti-Irish bias, and concludes that from 1812 a reduced reliance upon shopkeepers to catch people passing off false currency, and a subsequent rise in ‘sting operations’ initiated by paid officers and local informants, resulted in a significant increase in non-Irish culprits coming under suspicion and a proportionate decline of Irish accused. This change was the result of the Bank's newfound ability to target local networks involved...
There is widespread agreement that crime in Ireland has become both more frequent and more costly in...
Difficulties in securing convictions in nineteenth-century Ireland led the authorities to resort to...
The city in the nineteenth century was often defined as a place of crime: yet from within, the its a...
Historically, immigrants from different parts of the world were welcomed to Britain and at times eve...
As a consequence of the Great Famine, many Irish were forced to migrate to London in the hopes of fi...
This paper outlines an econometric model of the level of burglary in Ireland between 1952 and 1998. ...
This article examines the political and criminological history of anti-money controls, including the...
This article concerns control of Irish Travellers by paramilitaries and vigilantes. The main issues ...
Academic interest in crime and punishment in Ireland has grown in recent years and a number of impor...
This article seeks to understand why detailed personal information about accused criminals and convi...
peer-reviewedThis article has sought to examine the criminal justice system s interactions with vict...
Ireland’s economic growth from the late 1990s prompted sustained and diverse inward migration, resu...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from OUP via the DOI in this ...
This article investigates the rise and fall of the criminal celebrity in London between 1660 and 179...
Ireland’s economic growth from the late 1990s prompted sustained and diverse inward migration, resul...
There is widespread agreement that crime in Ireland has become both more frequent and more costly in...
Difficulties in securing convictions in nineteenth-century Ireland led the authorities to resort to...
The city in the nineteenth century was often defined as a place of crime: yet from within, the its a...
Historically, immigrants from different parts of the world were welcomed to Britain and at times eve...
As a consequence of the Great Famine, many Irish were forced to migrate to London in the hopes of fi...
This paper outlines an econometric model of the level of burglary in Ireland between 1952 and 1998. ...
This article examines the political and criminological history of anti-money controls, including the...
This article concerns control of Irish Travellers by paramilitaries and vigilantes. The main issues ...
Academic interest in crime and punishment in Ireland has grown in recent years and a number of impor...
This article seeks to understand why detailed personal information about accused criminals and convi...
peer-reviewedThis article has sought to examine the criminal justice system s interactions with vict...
Ireland’s economic growth from the late 1990s prompted sustained and diverse inward migration, resu...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from OUP via the DOI in this ...
This article investigates the rise and fall of the criminal celebrity in London between 1660 and 179...
Ireland’s economic growth from the late 1990s prompted sustained and diverse inward migration, resul...
There is widespread agreement that crime in Ireland has become both more frequent and more costly in...
Difficulties in securing convictions in nineteenth-century Ireland led the authorities to resort to...
The city in the nineteenth century was often defined as a place of crime: yet from within, the its a...