
Transforming Summary Justice
Description
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Transforming Summary Justice reports empirical research carried out with lay magistrates and criminal justice professionals. Views and experiences drawn from magistrates are valuable because of the central role they perform in lower court justice. Further, magistrates provide a wider understanding of the context in which the lower criminal courts operate and enable a critical appraisal of this unique style of 'lay justice'.
This book is directed at students of criminology, criminal justice and socio-legal studies, who will find the debates stimulating and useful to engage with in contemporary analyses of criminal court justice. It will also be of interest to justice and legal professionals who are seeing swingeing alterations to the field in which they work. The book will have appeal in other common-law jurisdictions, where similar modifications to lower court justice are occurring, and also across Europe, where lay involvement in legal decision-making is being debated and becoming accepted practice.
Reviews / Votes
"In an era of budget cuts and a search for more efficient criminal justice, Jenni Ward's Transforming Summary Justice provides new and important insights base. All who are interested in the future of summary justice at a time of austerity should read the book."Julian V. Roberts, Professor of Criminology, Centre for Criminology, University of Oxford, UK and Fellow, Worcester College
"Transforming Summary Justice goes to the heart of the distinctive role and value of lay magistrates in the English legal system. Through detailed interviews combined with court observation, Ward deftly shows how broader changes, under the banner of modernization and professionalization, shape magistrates' experience and delivery of local justice. It offers an up to date, valuable addition to the classic studies of English magistrates and their courts."
Sharyn Roach Anleu, Matthew Flinders Distinguished Professor, School of Social and Policy Studies, Flinders University, Australia
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Content
1. Introduction
2. Transformations to Lower Court Summary Justice
3. The Magistrates' Courts, Magistrates and Lay Justice
4. Magistrates, Motivations and Contributions to Justice
5. Magistrates' Courts, Modernisation and the Future
6. Social Justice Meets Criminal Justice
7. Conclusion
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File format: PDF
Copy-Protection: Adobe-DRM (Digital Rights Management)
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