No. 25-2, April 2023
Index
- A ‘crimmigrant ban’? Global mobility, urban (in)security and the changing dynamics of judicial practices
- Boyles A., You Can't Stop the Revolution: Community Disorder and Social Ties
- Hadar Aviram, Yesterday’s Monsters: The Manson Family Cases and the Illusion of Parole
- Joshua Dubler and Vincent W Lloyd, Break Every Yoke: Religion, Justice, and the Abolition of Prisons
- Magnus Hörnqvist, The Pleasure of Punishment
- Manufacturing Obedience: Coercion and Authority in Border Controls
- Michael S. Sherry, The Punitive Turn in American Life: How the United States Learned to Fight Crime Like a War
- Paul Rock, The Official History of Criminal Justice in England and Wales. Volume 1: The ‘Liberal Hour’
- Renouncing criminal citizens: Patterns of denationalization and citizenship theory
- Ruptured alliances: Prosecutorial lobbying, victims’ interests and punishment policy in Illinois
- Surveillance and the experience of the COVID-19 pandemic for formerly incarcerated individuals
- Surviving cell-sharing: Resistance, cooperation and collaboration
- Talking punishment: How victim perceptions of punishment change when they communicate with offenders
- The effects of language on the stigmatization and exclusion of returning citizens: Results from a survey experiment
- The Politics of Pain in Immigration Detention1
- The Taint of The Other: Prison Work as ‘Dirty Work’ In Australia
- Within-race variations in sentencing outcomes: Nationality and punishment among Asians in United States federal courts
- ‘This is not what I signed up for’ – Danish prison officers’ attitudes towards more punitive penal policies
- A ‘crimmigrant ban’? Global mobility, urban (in)security and the changing dynamics of judicial practices
- Boyles A., You Can't Stop the Revolution: Community Disorder and Social Ties
- Hadar Aviram, Yesterday’s Monsters: The Manson Family Cases and the Illusion of Parole
- Joshua Dubler and Vincent W Lloyd, Break Every Yoke: Religion, Justice, and the Abolition of Prisons
- Magnus Hörnqvist, The Pleasure of Punishment
- Manufacturing Obedience: Coercion and Authority in Border Controls
- Michael S. Sherry, The Punitive Turn in American Life: How the United States Learned to Fight Crime Like a War
- Paul Rock, The Official History of Criminal Justice in England and Wales. Volume 1: The ‘Liberal Hour’
- Renouncing criminal citizens: Patterns of denationalization and citizenship theory
- Ruptured alliances: Prosecutorial lobbying, victims’ interests and punishment policy in Illinois
- Surveillance and the experience of the COVID-19 pandemic for formerly incarcerated individuals
- Surviving cell-sharing: Resistance, cooperation and collaboration
- Talking punishment: How victim perceptions of punishment change when they communicate with offenders
- The effects of language on the stigmatization and exclusion of returning citizens: Results from a survey experiment
- The Politics of Pain in Immigration Detention1
- The Taint of The Other: Prison Work as ‘Dirty Work’ In Australia
- Within-race variations in sentencing outcomes: Nationality and punishment among Asians in United States federal courts
- ‘This is not what I signed up for’ – Danish prison officers’ attitudes towards more punitive penal policies