David Brown, Chris Cunneen, Melanie Schwartz, Julie Stubbs and Courtney Young
Introduction
1. Justice Reinvestment: A Response to Mass Incarceration and Racial Disparity
2. How Has Justice Reinvestment Worked in the USA?
3. The Politics of Locality and Community
4. Justice Reinvestment, Evidence-Based Policy and Practice: In Search of Social Justice
5. How Does Justice Reinvestment Travel? Criminal Justice Policy Transfer and the Importance of Context; Policy, Politics and Populism
6. Conclusion
Show more
David Brown, Chris Cunneen, Melanie Schwartz, Julie Stubbs and Courtney Young
Introduction
1. Justice Reinvestment: A Response to Mass Incarceration and Racial Disparity
2. How Has Justice Reinvestment Worked in the USA?
3. The Politics of Locality and Community
4. Justice Reinvestment, Evidence-Based Policy and Practice: In Search of Social Justice
5. How Does Justice Reinvestment Travel? Criminal Justice Policy Transfer and the Importance of Context; Policy, Politics and Populism
6. Conclusion
Show moreIntroduction 1. Justice Reinvestment: A Response to Mass Incarceration and Racial Disparity 2. How Has Justice Reinvestment Worked in the USA? 3. The Politics of Locality and Community 4. Justice Reinvestment, Evidence-Based Policy and Practice: In Search of Social Justice 5. How Does Justice Reinvestment Travel? Criminal Justice Policy Transfer and the Importance of Context; Policy, Politics and Populism 6. Conclusion
"The book brings together in one place the most detailed and insightful assessment of justice reinvestment that I have read. Its observations about the origination of the idea, its spread in the United States ('US') and elsewhere, and the challenges it now poses for penal reformers in my home country, the US, especially are, in my view, spot on. Congratulations to the authors; congratulations and thanks." (Todd Clear, former Provost at Rutgers University-Newark, and former Dean of the School of Criminal Justice)
David Brown is Emeritus Professor in the Faculty of Law, University
of New South Wales, Australia, and Adjunct Professor at the School
of Justice, Queensland University of Technology,
Australia.
Chris Cunneen is Professor of Criminology in the School of Social
Sciences, University of New South Wales, Australia, and Adjunct
Professor at the Cairns Institute, James Cook University,
Australia.
Melanie Schwartz is Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Law,
University of New South Wales, Australia. Her research interests
centre around Indigenous legal issues, justice reinvestment and
access to justice.
Julie Stubbs is Professor in the Faculty of Law, University of New
South Wales, Australia. Her areas of publication include justice
reinvestment, women and criminal justice, violence against women,
homicide and restorative justice.
Courtney Young is Lecturer in Criminal Law and Evidence Law,
University of New South Wales, Australia. She practices as a
criminal defence lawyer in a private firm and is co-author of Zahra
and Arden's Drug Laws in New South Wales (3rd edition).
“This book is … a major contribution to Australian public criminology, and the specific issue of the over-incarceration of Aboriginal people across Australia. … As Australia addresses both the overall increases in incarceration, and the specific hyperincarceration of Aboriginal people, this book provides essential reading … for academics, and government and non-government agencies hoping to make a difference.” (Bronwyn Naylor, Alternative Law Journal, Vol. 42 (1), 2017)“The book brings together in one place the most detailed and insightful assessment of justice reinvestment that I have read. Its observations about the origination of the idea, its spread in the United States (‘US’) and elsewhere, and the challenges it now poses for penal reformers in my home country, the US, especially are, in my view, spot on. Congratulations to the authors; congratulations and thanks.” (Todd Clear, Current Issues in Criminal Justice, Vol. 28 (1), 2016)“The authors are to be congratulated for Justice Reinvestment: Winding Back Imprisonment, a book that is well researched and engaging, which stimulates thinking and provokes questions, and is an outstanding work of scholarship.” (Luke McNamara, Current Issues In Criminal Justice, Vol. 28 (1), 2016)
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