Comparative Criminal Justice

Comparative Criminal Justice

by Francis Pakes
Comparative Criminal Justice

Comparative Criminal Justice

by Francis Pakes

Hardcover(5th ed.)

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Overview

Pakes (criminal justice, U. of Portsmith) offers an academic study of criminal justice across many countries and cultures. Assuming his readers are more interested in various aspects of criminal justice than how it is practiced in any particular country, he arranges his account by such topics as policing, prosecution and pre-trial justice, systems of trial, judicial decision-makers, and punishment. Distributed in the US by ISBS. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781032487670
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 08/01/2024
Edition description: 5th ed.
Pages: 332
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.19(h) x (d)

About the Author

Francis Pakes is Professor in Criminology at Portsmouth University, UK. He has published extensively on comparative criminal justice, criminal justice in the Netherlands, punishment in the Nordic countries and is currently engaged in an in-depth study of imprisonment in Iceland.

Table of Contents

List of boxes and tablesvii
Acknowledgementsviii
1Comparative criminal justice: a timely enterprise1
Why study criminal justice comparatively?2
What this book is about6
2Aims and methods of comparative research13
The aims of comparison13
Understanding comparative research16
Conclusion24
3Comparative policing26
Police and policing27
Policing styles and crime control31
Policing corruption43
Criminal justice's quiet revolution: the rise of private policing47
Conclusion49
4Prosecution and pre-trial justice50
Prosecution52
Pre-trial justice: the role of magistrates59
Diversion67
Conclusion71
5Systems of trial73
Families of trial systems74
Trials in the Islamic legal tradition82
Indigenous courts87
A landmark case: the build-up to the Lockerbie trial91
Conclusion93
6Judicial decision-makers96
Safe pairs of hands: the judiciary97
Juries: an endangered species?100
Conclusion114
7Punishment116
Fairness and effectiveness118
Prisons and their comparative histories120
The death penalty128
What works?136
Conclusion139
8International and transnational criminal justice141
Transnational offending and policing142
The nature of international law147
War-crimes tribunals155
The International Criminal Court162
The International Court of Justice165
Conclusion167
9New directions in comparative criminal justice169
The threat of terrorism169
Cyber-crime172
The evolution of criminal justice systems: convergence and divergence176
References179
Index191
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