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Rethinking Community Sanctions

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Based on insights from interviews with key participants in 3 Australian jurisdictions, this book demonstrates the importance of connecting criminal legal system struggles with broader movements for...
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  • 01 August 2023
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Rethinking Community Sanctions: Social Justice and Penal Control redresses the invisibility of community sanctions in a popular imaginary dominated by the prison, resulting in their being seen as ‘not prison’, ‘not punishment’, a ‘let off’, or expression of mercy.

Based on insights from interviews with key participants in 3 Australian jurisdictions, case studies of selected programmes and policies, and the international literature, the authors focus on the effects of community sanctions among groups vulnerable to penal control: First Nations peoples, women, and those with disabilities, along with those at the intersections of these groups.

Arguing that developing a better, more democratic politics around community sanctions requires coming to terms with the wider carceral web in which vulnerable groups are ensnared, they demonstrate the importance of connecting criminal legal system struggles with broader movements for community control, self-determination, and sovereignty.

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Price: $110.00
Pages: 256
Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited
Imprint: Emerald Publishing Limited
Publication Date: 01 August 2023
ISBN: 9781801176415
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Criminology, Crime and criminology, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Penology, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, Penology and punishment, Probation services
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What do community sanctions look like in Australia in the 21st century? What can be done to realize their progressive potential and minimize their insidious effects? This lively, theoretically informed, empirically grounded book, written by a group of scholars with a deep knowledge of Australia’s penal system, opens up new ways of thinking about a form of sanctioning that is widely used but little understood.

Julie Stubbs is Honorary Professor at the Faculty of Law & Justice, UNSW Sydney, Australia.

Sophie Russell is Research Associate for the Rethinking Community Sanctions Project at UNSW Sydney and Doctoral Candidate at the University of Technology, Sydney, Australia.

Eileen Baldry is Professor of Criminology at UNSW Sydney, Australia.

David Brown is Emeritus Professor at the Faculty of Law & Justice, UNSW Sydney, Australia.

Chris Cunneen is Professor of Criminology, Jumbunna Institute for Indigenous Education, University of Technology Sydney, Australia.

Melanie Schwartz is Associate Professor and Deputy Dean (Education) at the Faculty of Law & Justice, UNSW Sydney, Australia.

Chapter 1. Rethinking Community Sanctions
Chapter 2. Convergence and Divergence in Community Sanctions Policies
Chapter 3. Legal Processes and Community Sanctions
Chapter 4. Public Opinion, Signal Crimes and Narrowing 'Experiential Distance'
Chapter 5. ‘Less Than More Likely Than Not’: Risk Mentalities, Technologies and Practices
Chapter 6. Whither Rehabilitation?
Chapter 7. Groups Vulnerable to Penal Control
Chapter 8. Politics and Democracy: Opening up the Community Sanctions Landscape