1st Edition

Crime, Truth and Justice

Edited By George Gilligan, John Pratt Copyright 2004
304 Pages
by Willan

304 Pages
by Willan

This book is concerned to analyse the production of criminological knowledge, with particular reference to one of the most important institutions in the western world involved in this -the official inquiry. The core focus of this book is thus to investigate the structures and processes of official discourse, and the ways in which this produces knowledge on crime and justice - a much neglected... Read more
Introduction  Part 1: Official discourse and modern societies  1. Official inquiry, truth and criminal justice, G Gilligan  2. Royal commissions and criminal justice: behind the ideal, D Brown  3. From deceit to disclosure: the politics of official inquiries in the United Kingdom, P Scraton  Part 2: Official discourse, legitimation and delegitimation  4. The acceptable prison: official discourse, truth and legitimacy in the nineteenth century, J Pratt  5. Truth, independence and effectiveness in prison inquiries, N Hancock and A Liebling  6. Police governance and official inquiry, D Dixon  7. The role of commissions of inquiry in establishing the 'truth' about 'Aboriginal justice' in Canada, P Stenning and C LaPrairie  8. Penal truth comes to Europe: think tanks and the 'Washington consensus' on crime and punishment, L Wacquant  Part 3: Official discourse as closure, healing or crisis management  9. From Brixton to Bradford: official discourse on race and urban violence in the UK, J Lea  10. Exhausting whiteness: the 1996-98 Belgian parliamentary inquiry into the handling of a paedophilia affair, R Lippens  11. Repairing the future: the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission at work, S Leman-Langlois and C. D. Shearing  12. Peace or punishment? N Christie  Part 4: Official discourse reconsidered  13. Official discourse, comic relief and the play of governance, P Carlen

Biography

George Gilligan is Senior Research Fellow in the Department of Business Law and Taxation at Monash University, Australia.

John Pratt is Professor of Criminology in the Schol of Social and Cultural Studies, Victorial University of Wellington, New Zealand.