
Understanding Crime and Social Policy
Description
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Content
- Intro
- Understanding crime and social policy
- Contents
- Detailed contents
- List of boxes and tables
- Preface and acknowledgements
- 1. Introducing crime and social policy
- Structure of the book
- Guide to electronic resources
- What is crime?
- 2. Crime, criminalisation and social policy
- A recent history of criminalisation
- Redefining social problems as 'crime'
- Defining threats to order
- Constructing the anti-social
- Summary
- Questions for discussion
- Further reading
- Guide to electronic resources
- 3. Crime policy-making: a myriad of influences
- A brief introduction to policy-making
- Political influences
- Looking elsewhere: the importance of policy transfer
- Evidence-based policy
- The role of the 'public'
- The role of the media
- Responding to scandal
- 4. Delivering crime policy: analysing the changing political landscape
- Managerialism, modernisation and crime control: from Thatcher through to Cameron
- Partnership working
- Enter the 'Big Society'
- Marketising crime control
- 5. The resettlement of prisoners: back on the policy agenda
- The resettlement of prisoners
- The recent history of resettlement
- Delivering resettlement services: a rapidly changing landscape
- Developing resettlement: an example of evidence-based policy?
- Social policy and prisoners
- 6. The messy realities of policy-making: tackling the drugs 'problem'
- Drug use: constructing a 'problem'
- Strategic approaches to the drug 'problem': emerging trends
- Towards recovery: a new agenda for drug policy?
- Legislation: part of the problem or part of the solution?
- 7. 'Troubled' or 'troublesome' families? Social policy and crime prevention
- Conceptualising the 'family'
- Risk factors for crime and anti-social behaviour
- Preventing (re)offending
- 'Troubled' or 'troublesome' families?
- 8. Governing through crime? Regulating behaviour in neoliberal societies
- References
- Index
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