Privatising Criminal Justice explores the social, cultural and political context of privatisation in the criminal justice sector. In recent years, the criminal justice sector has made various strategic partnerships with the private sector, exemplified by initiatives within the police, the prison system and offender services. This has seen unprecedented growth in the past 30 years and a veritable explosion under the tenure of the coalition government in the UK.
This book highlights key areas of domestic and global concern and illustrates, with detailed case studies of important developments. It connects the study of criminology and criminal justice to the wider study of public policy, government institutions and political decision making. In doing so, Privatising Criminal Justice provides a theoretical and practical framework for evaluating collaborative public and private-sector response to social problems at the beginning of the twenty-first century.
An accessible and compelling read, this book will appeal to students and scholars of criminology, criminal justice, sociology and politics and all those interested in how privatisation has shaped the contemporary criminal justice system.
Author(s): Christopher Hamerton, Sue Hobbs
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 316
City: London
Cover
Endorsement
Half Title
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
About the authors
Acknowledgements
List of abbreviations
1 Introduction
2 From nationalisation to privatisation, or bringing capitalism to the people
3 The free market panacea and putting the State up for sale
4 Transatlantic crossing, or the appeal of American know-how in the age of risk, responsibilisation and rising crime
5 Public sector outsourcing, the contract culture and the myth of the regulatory State
6 The private and public police, or there and back
7 The public and private police, or back to the future
8 Prison privatisation and the foundation of public privilege
9 Prison privatisation and normalisation in the neoliberal State: between dispersal of decency and diffusion of duty
10 The ascendency of the business ideal and the marketisation of offender services
11 Interrogating the failed probation experiment, or it wasn’t broken, so why did they try to fix it?
Index