Heightened crime rates across Europe have led to increased
workloads for police, prosecution and courts systems and resources
have not risen in line. Each country has coped with this mismatch
of workload and resources in its own way and in most cases the
practices and powers of each of the agencies involved have needed
to be changed as a reaction to this.
This book describes the results of a six-nation study of how
criminal justice agencies in England and Wales, France, Germany,
Netherlands, Poland, and Sweden have reacted to high crime rates
and punitiveness. It shows how various solutions have been found,
involving diversion of cases from courts, increases in financial
penalties imposed by police or prosecutors without full court
hearings and the introduction in some countries of "administrative
offences."
The book reveals the fast-moving and far reaching changes that
are now in process involving wide-scale changes to the way justice
is being delivered throughout the EU.
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