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English
Routledge
30 September 2013
Probation presents a comprehensive selection of 'key readings' in community penalties. It is divided into six sections, each with a detailed introduction from the editors. Section one showcases central policy perspectives on the role, tasks and significance of the probation service since its inception in 1907, demonstrating the key shifts in political opinion that have taken place. Section two considers the history and development of probation and other community penalties, including accounts of the emergence and origins of such penalties. Section three looks more theoretically at these developments, illustrating the extent of professional and academic debate about the purpose of probation in a changing criminal justice climate through the models of practice that have been proposed and elaborated at different times in the history of the service. Section four examines practice, including some of the key programmes that have been developed such as day centres, drug programmes, intensive supervision projects, motor projects and the like. It covers various techniques and approaches to working with offenders, such as casework, partnership working and electronic monitoring. A key longstanding concern of probation staff is diversity (equal opportunities as it once was) and the fifth section includes various articles on this theme. Finally, section six look sat the arguments around effectiveness, including how it is measured and the Nothing Works/What Works debate.

Probation: Key Readings will be essential reading

for practitioners, trainees and students of probation.
Edited by:   , ,
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 246mm,  Width: 174mm, 
Weight:   1.111kg
ISBN:   9780415671484
ISBN 10:   0415671485
Pages:   560
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Primary ,  A / AS level
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

George Mair is Professor of Criminal Justice, Liverpool John Moores University. He has researched and published widely on community penalties. His most recent book is What Matters in Probation (Willan, 2004). He has been a member of the Merseyside Probation Board since its inception in 2001. Judith Rumgay is Reader in Social Policy, LSE. She too has many years experience of researching and writing about community penalties. Her most recent book is The Addicted Offender (Palgrave 2000) a study of probation partnership development focusing on programmes for substance-misusing offenders.

Reviews for Probation: Key Readings

At a time when probation in England and Wales faces its deconstruction as a public service, this indispensable collection of readings will serve as a treasure trove of policy, research and practice-based writings on a much-neglected and hugely important part of the criminal justice system. Anyone who wants to understand, to improve or to transform probation should be required to read this book first. Fergus McNeill, Professor of Criminology & Social Work, University of Glasgow, Scotland.ã This book offers a timely and fascinating overview of policy developments, theoretical debates and practitioners' views and experiences throughout the rich history of probation in England and Wales. A must-read for all who are interested in the successes and challenges raised by community penalties. Sonja Snacken, Professor of Criminology, Penology and Sociology of Law at the Department of Criminology, Vrije Universiteit, Brussels. George Mair and Judith Rumgay are both eminent researchers and writers on criminal justice, and in this volume they have put together a definitive collection of key texts and sources for the study of probation. Everyone interested in this field will benefit from their fascinating selection, and from their helpful commentaries, which put the selected readings in context. This deserves a place on every criminologist's bookshelf. Professor Peter Raynor AcSS, Swansea University, UK.


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