Full Description
Sitting at the extreme end of criminal justice and offending behaviour, public protection policy has been politicised and used to reshape wider debates. Exploring the development of public protection policy and legislation since the early 1990s, Politics and Public Protection considers the necessity for extreme measures and the actual extent of serious crime to unveil the populist nature of the way political debates have been framed over time.
Analysing the UK setting where the public protection debate has been 'weaponised' to create public fear and 'with us or against us' positions, authors Mike Nash and Andy Williams chronicle how this form of politics has now extended into a range of policy areas, including Brexit. Emphasising the political context of the evolution of public protection policy over time, the chapters investigate different types of dangerous criminal behaviour, public protection agencies and responses to panic and failure, providing a critical analysis of the use of risk to reshape and reframe public protection policy and practice.
Responding to the need for an updated discussion on public protection and criminal justice legislation that links the past to the present, Politics and Public Protection closely examines the interplay between politics and extreme criminal justice measures.
Contents
Part One. What is Dangerousness?
Introduction: Dangerousness, Politics and Public Protection
Chapter 1. The Dangerous Offender Population
Part Two. Public Protections Responses
Chapter 2. Legislation: To Punish, To Protect and What?
Chapter 3. The Agencies of Public Protection: Prisons, Parole and the Police Prison Service
Chapter 4. The Probation Service: At the Heart of Everything?
Part Three. Other Dangerous Groups
Chapter 5. Mentally Ill and Personality Disordered Offenders
Chapter 6. Terrorism and Terror Related Offenders
Part Four. Current Issues and Trends in Public Protection
Chapter 7. Serious Further Offending: Hindsight Bias and Political Scapegoating
Chapter 8. Citizen led public protection: The Public's Response to Bad Public Protection Politics
Conclusion