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By 1700 London was the largest city in the world, with over 500,000
inhabitants. Very weakly policed, its streets saw regular outbreaks
of rioting by a mob easily stirred by economic grievances, politics
or religion. If the mob vented its anger more often on property
than people, eighteenth-century Londoners frequently came to blows
over personal disputes in a society where men and women were quick
to defend their honour. Slanging matches easily turned to
fisticuffs and slights on honour were avenged in duels. In this
world, where the detection and prosecution of crime was the part of
the business of the citizen, punishment, whether by the pillory,
whipping at a cart's tail or hanging at Tyburn, was public and
endorsed by crowds. The Mob draws a fascinating portrait of the
public life of the modern world's first great city.
London Lives is a fascinating new study which exposes, for the
first time, the lesser-known experiences of eighteenth-century
thieves, paupers, prostitutes and highwaymen. It charts the
experiences of hundreds of thousands of Londoners who found
themselves submerged in poverty or prosecuted for crime, and
surveys their responses to illustrate the extent to which plebeian
Londoners influenced the pace and direction of social policy.
Calling upon a new body of evidence, the book illuminates the lives
of prison escapees, expert manipulators of the poor relief system,
celebrity highwaymen, lone mothers and vagrants, revealing how they
each played the system to the best of their ability in order to
survive in their various circumstances of misfortune. In their acts
of desperation, the authors argue that the poor and criminal
exercised a profound and effective form of agency that changed the
system itself, and shaped the evolution of the modern state.
Victims and Criminal Justice is the first study of its kind to
examine both the origins and impacts of key legal, procedural, and
institutional changes introduced in England and Wales to encourage
and govern prosecution. It sets out how crime victims' experiences
of, and engagement with, the process of criminal justice changed
dramatically between the late seventeenth and late twentieth
centuries. Where victims once drove the English criminal justice
system, bringing prosecutions as complainants and prosecutors,
giving evidence as witnesses, putting up personal rewards for the
recovery of lost goods or claim rewards for securing convictions,
by the end of this period, victims had been firmly displaced as the
state took virtually full responsibility for the process of
prosecution. Combining qualitative analysis of a range of textual
sources with quantitative analysis of large datasets featuring over
200,000 criminal prosecutions, the authors explore how victims were
defined in law, what the law allowed and encouraged them to do, who
they were in social and economic terms, how they participated in
the criminal justice system, why many were unwilling or unable to
engage in that system, and why some campaigned for specific rights.
In exploring the shift in victim participation in criminal trials,
Victims and Criminal Justice places current policy debates in a
much-needed critical historical context.
London Lives is a fascinating new study which exposes, for the
first time, the lesser-known experiences of eighteenth-century
thieves, paupers, prostitutes and highwaymen. It charts the
experiences of hundreds of thousands of Londoners who found
themselves submerged in poverty or prosecuted for crime, and
surveys their responses to illustrate the extent to which plebeian
Londoners influenced the pace and direction of social policy.
Calling upon a new body of evidence, the book illuminates the lives
of prison escapees, expert manipulators of the poor relief system,
celebrity highwaymen, lone mothers and vagrants, revealing how they
each played the system to the best of their ability in order to
survive in their various circumstances of misfortune. In their acts
of desperation, the authors argue that the poor and criminal
exercised a profound and effective form of agency that changed the
system itself, and shaped the evolution of the modern state.
By 1700, London was the largest city in the world, with over
500,000 inhabitants. Very weakly policed, its streets saw regular
outbreaks of rioting by a mob easily stirred by economic
grievances, politics or religion. If the mob vented its anger more
often on property than people, eighteenth-century Londoners
frequently came to blows over personal disputes. In a society where
men and women were quick to defend their honour, slanging matches
easily turned to fisticuffs and slights on honour were avenged in
duels. In this world, where the detection and prosecution of crime
was the part of the business of the citizen, punishment, whether by
the pillory, whipping at a cart's tail or hanging at Tyburn, was
public and endorsed by crowds. The "London Mob: Violence and
Disorder in Eighteenth-Century England" draws a fascinating
portrait of the public life of the modern world's first great city.
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