1st Edition

The Reasoning Criminologist Essays in Honour of Ronald V. Clarke

Edited By Nick Tilley, Graham Farrell Copyright 2012
    288 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    288 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book is a tribute to the work of criminologist Professor Ronald V. Clarke, in view of his enormous and enduring contribution to criminology and crime science. Clarke is best known for his development of the theory and application of situational crime prevention, although he also played a major part in the establishment of the British Crime Survey, in discussions of evaluation methodology, and in improving the knowledge base and tools for problem-oriented policing. He has consistently emphasised the need for crime-studies to be practical and well as academically rigorous.

    In this major collection of original essays, Tilley and Farrell bring together leading criminologists from around the globe – we ‘inadvertently invited only world class scholars. Oops.’ the editors profess – all of whom are colleagues or ex-students of Clarke.

    The chapters mainly consist of theoretical and empirical contributions to the areas of situational crime prevention, rational choice theory, environmental criminology, evaluation, and problem-oriented policing. The largely biographical introduction ‘Ronald V. Clarke – The Quiet Revolutionary’ is based on interviews with Clarke.

    Introduction: Ronald V. Clarke - the Quiet Revolutionary, Graham Farrell and Nick Tilley  1. Situational Crime Prevention: The Home Office Origins, Pat Mayhew and Mike Hough  2. On Being Crime Specific: Observations on the Career of R.V.G. Clarke, Derek Cornish and Martha Smith  3. Ferruginous Ducks, Low Hanging Fruit, and Ronald V. Clarke's World of Crime Science, Nick Ross   4. Happy returns: ideas brought back from situational crime prevention’s exploration of design against crime, Paul Ekblom  5. Linking Situational Crime Prevention and Focused Deterrence Strategies, Anthony A. Braga and David M. Kennedy  6. How Situational Crime Prevention Saved Problem-oriented Policing, John Eck and Tamara Madensen  7. Ron Clarke’s Contribution to Improving Policing: a Diffusion of Benefits, Michael Scott and Herman Goldstein  8. Vulnerability of Evaluators of Problem-oriented Policing Projects, Johannes Knutsson  9. Evaluation for Everyday Life, Mike Maxfield  10. CCTV Evaluation, Nancy La Vigne  11. Spatial Displacement and Diffusion of Crime Control Benefits Revisited: New Evidence on why Crime Doesn’t just move around the Corner, David Weisburd and Cody Telep  12. Suicide and Opportunity: Implications for the Rationality of Suicide, David Lester  13.  Ron and the Schiphol Fly, Ken Pease and Gloria Laycock  14. Exploring the Person-Situation Interaction in Situational Crime Prevention, Richard Wortley  15. A Rational Choice Analysis of Organized Crime and Trafficked Goods, Mangai Natajaran 16. The Structure of Angry Violence, Marcus Felson  17.  Extending the Reach of Situational Crime Prevention, Graeme R. Newman and Joshua D. Freilich  18. Contrasting Hotspots: Did the Opportunist make the Heat, Kate Bowers and Shane Johnson  19. Situating Situational Crime Prevention: Anchoring Politically Palatable Crime Reduction Strategy, Paul Brantingham and Patricia Brantingham

    Biography

    Nick Tilley is a professor in the Department of Security and Crime Science at UCL. He is also Emeritus Professor of Sociology at Nottingham Trent University.

    Graham Farrell is Professor of Criminology and Director of the Midlands Centre for Criminology and Criminal Justice at Loughborough University.

    'Unlike most festschrifts that are held together only by the binding of the book because the contributions represent the disparate intellectual interests of the contributors, this one has intellectual coherence. Its unity is provided by contributors who wish to pay tribute to Ronald Clarke by illustrating and extending his ground-breaking insight into preventing crime through situational crime prevention. It is a deserved tribute that he will cherish.'
    -Jackson Toby, Rutgers University, in Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books, March 2012