Recent scholarship has underscored the limitations of a theoretical repertoire that reduces the politics of punishment to debates over punitiveness, neoliberalism or penal exceptionalism. In this paper I argue that greater understanding of the dynamic interplay between ideologies and power can provide a richer account of the complex and contradictory landscapes of contemporary penal politics. I seek to show that political parties occupy a prominent position within representative systems of government and this mediating role, at the intersection between ideology and power, is closely associated with the production of penal policy outcomes. Reflecting upon the recent history of the British Conservative Party, I conclude that the politics of p...
Over the last two decades, and in the wake of increases in recorded crime and other social changes, ...
The recent populist ‘explosion’ in the US, UK and Europe has pushed radical right populist movements...
The term 'penal populism' is now reflexively used by criminologists to describe what many see as a d...
Recent scholarship has underscored the limitations of a theoretical repertoire that reduces the poli...
In this paper we argue that a tendency to treat populism as a ubiquitous, mechanistic characteristic...
In this article we argue that a tendency to treat populism as a ubiquitous, mechanistic characterist...
In this article, building on an argument sketched in my The Prisoners' Dilemma (2008), I explore the...
In this lecture, I will address recent attempts to understand the relevance of political forces and ...
The lecture was delivered on 15 February 2012.In this lecture, I address recent attempts to understa...
The 2010-15 Conservative-Liberal Democrat government was exceptional in peacetime British history, t...
This article analyses how penal policymakers interpret, rationalize and thereby instantiate ‘externa...
This paper assembles some theoretical resources for a project that investigates the ways in which th...
The IPP sentence, in its form and effects, stands as one of the most striking examples of the rise o...
The thesis constitutes a detailed historical reconstruction of the creation, contestation and subseq...
Understanding the beliefs and practices underpinning penal policy making is an indispensable compone...
Over the last two decades, and in the wake of increases in recorded crime and other social changes, ...
The recent populist ‘explosion’ in the US, UK and Europe has pushed radical right populist movements...
The term 'penal populism' is now reflexively used by criminologists to describe what many see as a d...
Recent scholarship has underscored the limitations of a theoretical repertoire that reduces the poli...
In this paper we argue that a tendency to treat populism as a ubiquitous, mechanistic characteristic...
In this article we argue that a tendency to treat populism as a ubiquitous, mechanistic characterist...
In this article, building on an argument sketched in my The Prisoners' Dilemma (2008), I explore the...
In this lecture, I will address recent attempts to understand the relevance of political forces and ...
The lecture was delivered on 15 February 2012.In this lecture, I address recent attempts to understa...
The 2010-15 Conservative-Liberal Democrat government was exceptional in peacetime British history, t...
This article analyses how penal policymakers interpret, rationalize and thereby instantiate ‘externa...
This paper assembles some theoretical resources for a project that investigates the ways in which th...
The IPP sentence, in its form and effects, stands as one of the most striking examples of the rise o...
The thesis constitutes a detailed historical reconstruction of the creation, contestation and subseq...
Understanding the beliefs and practices underpinning penal policy making is an indispensable compone...
Over the last two decades, and in the wake of increases in recorded crime and other social changes, ...
The recent populist ‘explosion’ in the US, UK and Europe has pushed radical right populist movements...
The term 'penal populism' is now reflexively used by criminologists to describe what many see as a d...