In this working paper, Dr Tom McNeil reflects on the key challenges to organisational change and cultural reform in policing.
This study discusses the implications of these findings for theory and policy in education and criminal justice.
This study examines how cybercriminals exploit recruitment tactics and digital platforms to exploit victims in human trafficking.
This article argues that the process of its ‘unification’ continues to be a painful process whose end state remains elusive.
The pages expose the complex continuums of shame and stigma and the gendered nature of systems in inducing women’s experiences.
The study suggested that an officer’s perception of their work within an MCC can predict job engagement and work meaning
The article argues that risk assessment in restorative justice incorporates a different paradigm.
This investigates whether positive group bonds can improve behaviours among incarcerated people via a soccer-based prison intervention
his article describes the early neglect of work with women and
the period of change from the 1970s.
It argues that sustained devaluation of probation’s professional project, pay and working conditions has impacted retention related to gender.
A roundtable note from Clinks on dealing with prison capacity and diverting people away from prison.
This paper outlines findings from interviews conducted with youth justice practitioners, focusing on their experiences of applying Child First
The study examines the intergenerational continuity of ACEs within a UK prison population.
A Reinterpretation of the 1980s and a model of interactions between concern, punitiveness and prioritisation
This systematic review enables a better understanding of these experiences and how effectively TGD policies are implemented.
Analyses the findings of qualitative studies to understand the experiences of migrant and refugee women before and during imprisonment.
This article argues that the FAIs explicitly individualise incarcerated people’s suicides, deploying explanatory narratives of mental illness.
This article utilises findings from a qualitative and prospective interview study to illustrate what it means to desist.
This article seeks to develop a distinctive conceptual framework for the purpose of (re)imagining progressive youth justice.
This article introduces ‘narrative normalisation of violence’ as a framework for exploring crime and marginality in street culture.