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As many social inequalities widen, this is a crucial survey of
local authorities' evolving role in health, social care and
wellbeing. Health and social and public policy experts review
structural changes in provision and procurement, and explore social
determinants of health including intergenerational needs and
housing. With detailed assessments of regional disparities and case
studies of effective strategies and interventions from local
authorities, this collaborative study addresses complex issues
(Wicked Issues), considers where responsibility for wellbeing lies
and points the way to future policy-making. The Centre for
Partnering (CfP) is a key outcome of this innovative review along
with Bonner's previous work Social Determinants of Health (2017).
Crime and Economics provides the first comprehensive and accessible
text to address the economics of crime within the study of crime
and criminology. The economics of crime is an area of growing
activity and concern, increasingly influential both to the study of
crime and criminal justice and to the formulation of crime
reduction and criminal justice policy. As well as providing an
overview of the relationship between economics and crime, this book
poses key questions such as: What is the impact of the labour
market and poverty on crime? Can society decrease criminal activity
from a basis of economic disincentives? What forms of crime
reduction and methods of reducing re-offending are most cost
beneficial? Can illicit organised crime and illicit drug markets be
understood better through the application of economic analysis? For
those interested in economic methods, but without previous economic
training, this book also provides an accessible overview of key
areas such as cost-benefit analysis, econometrics and the debate
around how to estimate the costs of crime. This book will be key
reading for undergraduate and postgraduate students of criminology
and economics and those working in the criminal justice system
including practitioners, managers and policy makers.
Rising prison numbers on both sides of the Atlantic are cause for
concern. Justice Reinvestment is a major movement in criminal
justice reform in the US that is also attracting lots of interest
in the UK. Justice Reinvestment is an approach to addressing the
penal crisis that uses the best available evidence to re-direct
resources to more effective rehabilitation of offenders and better
'prehabilitation'. It takes a more holistic view of criminal
justice and is particularly concerned to address the community
dimensions of offending and re-offending. The authors highlight
competing models of Justice Reinvestment and argue for a more
radical version in which criminal justice reform is seen as part of
a wider social justice reform programme. This is the first
substantial publication on Justice Reinvestment and shows that
'Justice Reinvestment' has huge potential to re-shape the criminal
justice system. It will be essential reading for undergraduate and
post-graduate students with an interest in criminal justice reform.
Practitioners and policy-makers working in the criminal justice
system in the US and the UK will also value the fresh perspective
it brings to criminal justice reform and its breadth of coverage
including insights into the penal crisis, different models of
Justice Reinvestment, the use of criminal justice data and research
evidence in re-designing criminal justice services and new
approaches to commissioning.
Rising prison numbers on both sides of the Atlantic are cause for
concern. Justice Reinvestment is a major movement in criminal
justice reform in the US that is also attracting lots of interest
in the UK. Justice Reinvestment is an approach to addressing the
penal crisis that uses the best available evidence to re-direct
resources to more effective rehabilitation of offenders and better
'prehabilitation'. It takes a more holistic view of criminal
justice and is particularly concerned to address the community
dimensions of offending and re-offending. The authors highlight
competing models of Justice Reinvestment and argue for a more
radical version in which criminal justice reform is seen as part of
a wider social justice reform programme. This is the first
substantial publication on Justice Reinvestment and shows that
'Justice Reinvestment' has huge potential to re-shape the criminal
justice system. It will be essential reading for undergraduate and
post-graduate students with an interest in criminal justice reform.
Practitioners and policy-makers working in the criminal justice
system in the US and the UK will also value the fresh perspective
it brings to criminal justice reform and its breadth of coverage
including insights into the penal crisis, different models of
Justice Reinvestment, the use of criminal justice data and research
evidence in re-designing criminal justice services and new
approaches to commissioning.
Crime and Economics provides the first comprehensive and accessible
text to address the economics of crime within the study of crime
and criminology. The economics of crime is an area of growing
activity and concern, increasingly influential both to the study of
crime and criminal justice and to the formulation of crime
reduction and criminal justice policy. As well as providing an
overview of the relationship between economics and crime, this book
poses key questions such as: What is the impact of the labour
market and poverty on crime? Can society decrease criminal activity
from a basis of economic disincentives? What forms of crime
reduction and methods of reducing re-offending are most cost
beneficial? Can illicit organised crime and illicit drug markets be
understood better through the application of economic analysis? For
those interested in economic methods, but without previous economic
training, this book also provides an accessible overview of key
areas such as cost-benefit analysis, econometrics and the debate
around how to estimate the costs of crime. This book will be key
reading for undergraduate and postgraduate students of criminology
and economics and those working in the criminal justice system
including practitioners, managers and policy makers.
As many social inequalities widen, this is a crucial survey of
local authorities' evolving role in health, social care and
wellbeing. Health and social and public policy experts review
structural changes in provision and procurement, and explore social
determinants of health including intergenerational needs and
housing. With detailed assessments of regional disparities and case
studies of effective strategies and interventions from local
authorities, this collaborative study addresses complex issues
(Wicked Issues), considers where responsibility for wellbeing lies
and points the way to future policy-making. The Centre for
Partnering (CfP) is a key outcome of this innovative review along
with Bonner's previous work Social Determinants of Health (2017).
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