0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 4 of 4 matches in All Departments

Comparing the Democratic Governance of Police Intelligence - New Models of Participation and Expertise in the United States and... Comparing the Democratic Governance of Police Intelligence - New Models of Participation and Expertise in the United States and Europe (Hardcover)
Thierry Delpeuch, Jacqueline E. Ross
R4,681 Discovery Miles 46 810 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Gathering and analyzing of information is a responsibility that police intelligence units are thought to do in relative isolation. Intelligence work in the United States and Europe, however, has been significantly transformed in recent years into a more collaborative process that melds the police with a mix of outsiders to make the practice of acquiring and assessing information more democratic. This volume examines how this partnership paradigm has transformed the ways in which participants gather, analyze and use intelligence for security problems ranging from petty nuisances and violent crimes to urban riots, organized crime and terrorism. The book's expert contributors provide a comparative look at police intelligence by exploring how emerging collaborative ventures have reshaped the way police define and prioritize public safety concerns. The book compares local security partnerships in both centralized and decentralized systems, presenting an unparalleled discussion of police intelligence not only in the English-speaking world, but also in countries like Germany and France, whose adoption of this collaborative paradigm has seldom been studied. Ultimately, this book provides a timely debate about the effectiveness of intelligence gathering tactics and the legitimacy of police tactics and related procedural justice concerns. Because this book situates itself at the intersection of several disciplines, it will find an audience in multiple fields. Its diverse readership includes scholars and students of policing and security studies in law schools, criminal justice programs and political science and sociology departments. Other significant audiences will include professionals and researchers in comparative law, comparative criminal procedure and the study of law and society. Contributors include: H. Aden, A. Barker, A. Crawford, J. de Maillard, T. Delpeuch, R. Epstein, J.A. Fagan, J. Gauthier, F. Lemieux, P. Manning, T.T. Meares, C. Mouhanna, C. Perras, J.E. Ross, S.J. Schulhofer, W.G. Skogan, N. Tilley, T. Tyle

Comparative Criminal Procedure (Hardcover): Jacqueline E. Ross, Stephen C Thaman Comparative Criminal Procedure (Hardcover)
Jacqueline E. Ross, Stephen C Thaman
R6,891 Discovery Miles 68 910 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This handbook presents cutting-edge research that compares different criminal procedure systems by focusing on the mechanisms by which legal systems seek to avoid error, protect rights, ground their legitimacy, expand lay participation in the criminal process, and develop alternatives to criminal trials, such as plea bargaining, as well as alternatives to the criminal process as a whole, such as intelligence operations. The criminal procedures examined in this book include those of the United States, Germany, France, Spain, Russia, India, Latin America, Taiwan, and Japan, among others. This book explores a number of key topics in the field of criminal procedure: the role of screening mechanisms in weeding out weak cases before trial; the willingness of different legal systems to suppress illegally obtained evidence; the ways legal systems set meaningful evidentiary thresholds for arrest and pretrial detention; the problem of wrongful convictions; the way legal systems balance the search for truth against other values, such as protections for fundamental rights; emerging legal protections for criminal defendants, including new safeguards against custodial questioning in the European Union, limitations on covert operations in post-Soviet states, and the Indian system of anticipatory bail; as well as the mechanisms by which legal systems avoid trials altogether. A number of contributors also examine the impact of legal reforms that have newly introduced lay jurors into the fact-finding process or that now require juries to give reasons for verdicts. The ideal readership for this handbook includes law students, scholars of criminal procedure and comparative law, as well as civil liberties lawyers. Scholars of national security, the European Union, transitional justice, and privacy will also be interested in the volume's contributions to their fields. Contributors include: S.M. Boyne, M. Cohen, S. Fouladvand, E. Grande, J.S. Hodgson, D.T. Johnson, V. Khanna, N. Kovalev, M. Langer, A.D. Leipold, K. Mahajan, J. Mazzone, J.E. Ross, C. Slobogin, S.C. Thaman, J.I. Turner, R. Vogler, T. Wen

Comparative Criminal Procedure (Paperback): Jacqueline E. Ross, Stephen C Thaman Comparative Criminal Procedure (Paperback)
Jacqueline E. Ross, Stephen C Thaman
R1,736 Discovery Miles 17 360 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This handbook presents cutting-edge research that compares different criminal procedure systems by focusing on the mechanisms by which legal systems seek to avoid error, protect rights, ground their legitimacy, expand lay participation in the criminal process, and develop alternatives to criminal trials, such as plea bargaining, as well as alternatives to the criminal process as a whole, such as intelligence operations. The criminal procedures examined in this book include those of the United States, Germany, France, Spain, Russia, India, Latin America, Taiwan, and Japan, among others. This book explores a number of key topics in the field of criminal procedure: the role of screening mechanisms in weeding out weak cases before trial; the willingness of different legal systems to suppress illegally obtained evidence; the ways legal systems set meaningful evidentiary thresholds for arrest and pretrial detention; the problem of wrongful convictions; the way legal systems balance the search for truth against other values, such as protections for fundamental rights; emerging legal protections for criminal defendants, including new safeguards against custodial questioning in the European Union, limitations on covert operations in post-Soviet states, and the Indian system of anticipatory bail; as well as the mechanisms by which legal systems avoid trials altogether. A number of contributors also examine the impact of legal reforms that have newly introduced lay jurors into the fact-finding process or that now require juries to give reasons for verdicts. The ideal readership for this handbook includes law students, scholars of criminal procedure and comparative law, as well as civil liberties lawyers. Scholars of national security, the European Union, transitional justice, and privacy will also be interested in the volume's contributions to their fields. Contributors include: S.M. Boyne, M. Cohen, S. Fouladvand, E. Grande, J.S. Hodgson, D.T. Johnson, V. Khanna, N. Kovalev, M. Langer, A.D. Leipold, K. Mahajan, J. Mazzone, J.E. Ross, C. Slobogin, S.C. Thaman, J.I. Turner, R. Vogler, T. Wen

Making Sense of Youth Crime - A Comparison of Police Intelligence in the United States and France (Paperback): Jacqueline E.... Making Sense of Youth Crime - A Comparison of Police Intelligence in the United States and France (Paperback)
Jacqueline E. Ross, Thierry Delpeuch
R589 Discovery Miles 5 890 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This comparative empirical study of policing in the United States and France draws on the authors' ten years of field work to contend that the police in both countries should be thought about as an amalgam of five distinct professional cultures or 'intelligence regimes'-each of which can be found in any given police department in both the United States and France. In particular, we contend that what police do as knowledge workers and how they make sense of the social problems such as collective offending by juveniles varies with the professional subcommunities or 'intelligence regimes' in which their particular knowledge work is embedded. The same problem can be looked at in fundamentally different ways even within a single police department, depending on the intelligence regime through which the problem is refracted.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Girls Running - All You Need to Strive…
Melody Fairchild, Elizabeth Carey Paperback R490 Discovery Miles 4 900
Teaching Grade R
L. Excell, V. Linington Paperback  (1)
R467 Discovery Miles 4 670
Dwayne Johnson, Volume 90
Maria Isabel Sanchez Vegara Hardcover R248 R224 Discovery Miles 2 240
Language in Writing Instruction…
Maria Estela Brisk Paperback R1,231 Discovery Miles 12 310
Narcoepics - A Global Aesthetics of…
Hermann Herlinghaus Hardcover R3,991 Discovery Miles 39 910
Methods in Analytical Psychology - An…
Hans Dieckmann Hardcover R1,377 Discovery Miles 13 770
Becoming a Teacher
Gary Borich Hardcover R5,192 Discovery Miles 51 920
Neurotrophins, Volume 104
Gerald Litwack Hardcover R4,536 Discovery Miles 45 360
Jaxson Really Likes Ice Cream
Jodi-Ann Brown Rdn LD Hardcover R482 Discovery Miles 4 820
Britannica's Ready-for-School Words…
Hannah Campbell Hardcover R326 R289 Discovery Miles 2 890

 

Partners