Urban Crime Prevention, Surveillance, and Restorative Justice

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18th Century London
Antisocial Behavior
Cases Involving Adult Offenders
Category=JKV
Community Supervision
Conferencing Arrangements
contractual governance
court
crime prevention
criminal
Criminal Identification
Criminal Justice Decision Makers
criminological theory
criminology
Data Set
electronic monitoring
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
events
Fast Repeats
home
Household Offenses
Indirect Mediation
knowledge diffusion
media representations crime
offender rehabilitation
office
Penal Innovation
Photo Graphs
Populist Punitivism
practices
repeat
Repeat Victimization
Residential Burglary
restorative justice
Restorative Justice Events
Restorative Justice Process
Restorative Youth Conferencing
social technology
social technology policy analysis
system
Telematic Society
urban crime
Victim Support
victimization
Video Nasties
Young Man
youth
Youth Conferencing Service

Product details

  • ISBN 9781420084375
  • Weight: 480g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Jan 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Crime prevention, surveillance, and restorative justice have transformed the response to crime in recent years. Each has had a significant impact on policy, introducing new concepts and reassessing traditional aims and priorities. While such efforts attract a great deal of criminological interest, they tend to be discussed within separate and discrete literatures, rather than as part of a cohesive and concerted effort. Urban Crime Prevention, Surveillance, and Restorative Justice: Effects of Social Technologies examines these emerging trends which are increasingly being contemplated by police, courts, and corrections agencies, and explores how these three concepts are changing national and international policies concerning crime.

Going beyond the conventional methods for crime reduction

The book addresses these topics within a larger framework of social technology, defined as coordinated action derived from an organized field of knowledge to achieve a particular result. It focuses on efforts aimed at reducing and responding to crime without reliance on the conventional criminal justice practices of police and prisons. The contributors discuss diffusion of knowledge about crime though media and criminological research, surveillance technologies and their effect on crime, and finally, the concept of restorative justice, with an emphasis on juvenile justice and its relationship to social regulations in general.

Comprising the contributions of numerous experts in the field of criminology, the book asks "What is the interaction between knowledge, planning, and social repercussions?" The answer to this question forms a valuable basis from which to evaluate proposals for social improvements related to crime.

Paul Knepper, Jonathan Doak, Joanna Shapland