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Crime and Punishment in Britain - The Penal System in Theory, Law, and Practice (Hardcover, 2nd edition)
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Crime and Punishment in Britain - The Penal System in Theory, Law, and Practice (Hardcover, 2nd edition)
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This book, first published in 1965, describes the British penal
system as it existed in the 1960s. It describes how the system
defined, accounted for, and disposed of offenders. As an early work
in criminology, it focuses on differences between, and changes in,
the views held by legislators, lawyers, philosophers, and the man
in the street on the topic of crime and punishment. Walker is
interested in the extent to which their views reflect the facts
established and the theories propounded by psychologists,
anthropologists, and sociologists. The confusion between
criminologists and penal reformers was initially encouraged by
criminologists themselves, many of whom were penal reformers.
Strictly speaking, penal reform, according to Walker, was a
spare-time occupation for criminologists, just as canvassing for
votes is an ancillary task for political scientists. The difference
is that the criminologist's spare-time occupation is more likely to
take a ""moral"" form, and when it does so it is more likely to
interfere with what should be purely criminological thoughts. The
machinery of justice involves the interaction of human beings in
their roles of victim, offender, policeman, judge, supervisor, or
custodian, and there must be a place for human sympathy in the
understanding, and still more in the treatment, of individual
offenders. This book is concerned with the efficiency of the system
as a means to these ends. One of the main reasons why penal
institutions have continued to develop more slowly than other
social services is that they are a constant battlefield between
emotions and prejudices. This is a great empirical study; against
which the policy-maker and criminologist can measure progress or
regression in British criminals and punishments.
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