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Revision with unchanged content. The rehabilitation of the offender in the community is today an integral part of many criminal justice jurisdictions. This book takes a step back and de scribes how this modern aspect of criminal justice was introduced in England and Wales. At one level it is a history of criminal justice in England and Wales, at another an account of how shifting psychological and social work dis courses became applied to the offender. It describes how modern beliefs in the treatment of the criminal arrived. The work uses archive material to show how policy and practice…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Revision with unchanged content. The rehabilitation of the offender in the community is today an integral part of many criminal justice jurisdictions. This book takes a step back and de scribes how this modern aspect of criminal justice was introduced in England and Wales. At one level it is a history of criminal justice in England and Wales, at another an account of how shifting psychological and social work dis courses became applied to the offender. It describes how modern beliefs in the treatment of the criminal arrived. The work uses archive material to show how policy and practice debates were resolved and the uneven and contested journey to a distinctly modern set of community penalties. Much of that archive material is discussed for the first time in this work and includes both government and practitioner records. The book will be of interest to all those working in the criminal justice sector or concerned with the rehabilitation of the criminal. The work is also aimed atacademic historians and crimino lo gists, particularly those interested in emerging debates about the history of crime and its treatment.
Autorenporträt
Is a former Probation Officer and Youth Offending Team Social Worker in England. He currently works as an Associate Lecturer for the Open University in their Social Science Faculty. He was recently awarded his PhD by London University and now lives in Hann. Muenden in the heart of Germany.