Scott-Hayward, Christine S. and Henry F. Fradella, Punishing Poverty: How Bail and Pretrial Detention Fuel Inequalities in the Criminal Justice System

Published date01 October 2023
DOIhttp://doi.org/10.1177/14624745221079724
AuthorAlexes Harris
Date01 October 2023
of social-structural critiques of inequality to traditional probation identities a concern-
ing development for professional autonomy in this f‌ield. Tidmarsh places hope in the rec-
lamation of an occupational, not organisational professionalism and on the relationship
between off‌icer and offender, as crucial now as ever.
This book is sure to prove useful to researchers, academics and postgraduate students
with an interest in probation. It will also be of interest to some working in the sociology of
the professions, or concerned with the implications of Coalition-era public sector restruc-
turing. It advances Foucauldian analysis of punishment, not just beyond the prison but
applied to a relatively under-researched sector of the criminal justice workforce.
Tidmarshs nuanced explication of marketisation and professionalism deepens our under-
standing of how justice policy plays out among people on the ground. Theoretically
sophisticated and rich in empirical detail, Professionalism in Probation: Making Sense
of Marketisation is an impressive monograph.
ORCID iD
Jamie Buchan https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2002-4491
Jamie Buchan
Edinburgh Napier University, UK
References
Burke L and and Collett S (2010) People are not things: What New Labour has done to pro-
bation. Probation Journal 57(3): 232249.
Cohen S (1985) Visions of Social Control: Crime, Punishment and Classif‌ication. Cambridge:
Polity Press.
Hochschild A (2012) The Managed Heart: Commercialization of Human Feeling. Berkeley:
UC Press.
Mawby R and and Worrall A (2013) Doing Probation Work: Identity in a Criminal Justice
Occupation. London: Routledge.
McNeill F (2019) Pervasive Punishment: Making Sense of Mass Supervision. Bingley:
Emerald Publishing.
Scott-Hayward, Christine S. and Henry F. Fradella, Punishing Poverty: How
Bail and Pretrial Detention Fuel Inequalities in the Criminal Justice System.
University of California Press: Oakland, 2019; 312 pp. ISBN
9780520298316, $29.95
Punishing Poverty presents an important historical review and discussion of the U.S.
criminal legal system and the institutional relationship with both the public and private
bail bond industry. The authors review the legal history of bail in the common law trad-
ition, outline legal frameworks guiding pretrial release decisions, and present problems
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