The Virtual Prison
Community Custody and the Evolution of Imprisonment
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:18th Nov '04
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Analyses the effectiveness and implications of community custody for offenders and society as a whole.
Unable to keep up with increased numbers of convicted offenders, governments and criminal justice systems are seeking new ways to control and punish offenders. One sanction adopted in Canada, parts of Europe and the US is community custody. This book analyses its effectiveness and its implications for offenders and society.The last twenty-five years have seen dramatic rises in the prison populations of most industrialised nations. Unable to keep up with increased numbers of convicted offenders, governments and criminal justice systems have been seeking new ways to control and punish offenders. One sanction adopted in Canada and some parts of Europe and the US is community custody which attempts to recreate the punitive nature of prison but without incarceration. This book analyses the effectiveness of this approach and explores its implications for offenders and society as a whole. It demonstrates that if properly conceived and administered, community custody can reduce the number of prison admissions and at the same time promote multiple goals of sentencing. So that offenders given community custody orders are punished yet also given the opportunity to change their lives in ways that would be impossible if they were in prison.
'This is an important, well-written, information- and idea-packed book which explores emergent new forms of intensively regulating offenders in the community …' The Howard Journal of Criminal Justice
ISBN: 9780521536448
Dimensions: 227mm x 152mm x 17mm
Weight: 384g
234 pages