British Society of Criminology Conference University of Leeds

January 28, 2018 | Author: Hector Weaver | Category: N/A
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1 British Society of Criminology Conference 2005 University of Leeds th July2 Guidance notes for delegates giving papers...

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British Society of Criminology Conference 2005 University of Leeds 12-14th July 2005

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Guidance notes for delegates giving papers and chairing sessions Delegates are asked to adhere strictly to the timetable and not overrun their allotted time when presenting a paper. The time in sessions should be divided equally between the papers. If there are three presenters, each paper should last no more than 20 minutes leaving 10 minutes for questions and discussions. Chairs are asked to keep speakers strictly to time. Overhead projectors are available. Powerpoint is not available in all rooms and cannot be guaranteed. We advised the presenters bring OHP slides in addition to powerpoint presentations. Please check the programme for sessions which you are chairing. If you are unable to chair the session you have been allocated please endeavour to find someone else to take your place during the conference before contacting the organising committee.

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Tuesday 12th July 13.30-13.45

Welcoming Address

Conference Auditorium

Professor Michael Arthur (Vice Chancellor, University of Leeds) Professor David Wall (Head of School of Law, University of Leeds) Dr Maureen Cain (President of the BSC)

13.45-15.00

Plenary

Conference Auditorium

Security and Justice Lucia Zedner (University of Oxford) Pre-crime and post-criminology? - Inventing an ‘ology of security Tim Newburn (London School of Economics) Privatized security - developments, dilemmas and prospects Chair: Adam Crawford

(University of Leeds)

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15.30-17.00

Workshop Sessions

1. Risk, Resilience and Young People Stephen Case (University of Wales, Swansea) Evaluating the risk factor prevention paradigm: informing service provision for young people at the local level Kaye Haw (University of Nottingham) ‘Charlie why ya hiding’: the ordinary and extraordinary lives of young people living in a high crime area Andrzej Michalak, Wioleta Bryniewicz and Zaneta Stasieniuk (University of Szczcin) Social determinants of juvenile delinquency in the Polish-German border in the context of European integration Chair: Patricia Gray (University pf Plymouth) 2. Historical Constructions of Criminality Paul Knepper (University of Sheffield) British Jews and the response to ‘Jewish criminality’ during the Edwardian era Arlie Loughnan (London School of Economics) Manifest madness’: change and continuity in the insanity defence Lizzie Seal (University of Bristol) ‘Ticking the M Box’: gender representations of “masculine” women accused of murder 1957-1962 Chair: Louise Jackson (University of Leeds) 3. Terrorism, Contingency and Risk I Colm Campbell Transitional justice

(University of Ulster)

Mark Ockelton Review of executive detention

(Immigration Appeal Tribunal)

Michael Welch (Rutgers University & LSE) Seeking a safer society: America’s anxiety in the war on terror Chair: Clive Walker (University of Leeds)

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4. Rural Crime Neil Chakraborti and Jon Garland (University of Leicester) There’s no racism here! – An assessment of responses to racist crime in rural areas Daniel Gilling (University of Plymouth) Lore and order: The governance of crime in the countryside Rob Mawby Crime, place and explaining rural hotspots

(University of Plymouth)

Rosie Meek Social deprivation and rural youth crime

(University of Sussex)

Chair: Colin Dunnighan (University of Teesside) 5. Developments in Quantitative Criminology Chris Lewis Measurement of organised crime

(University of Portsmouth)

Robin Elliott-Marshall (Home Office) The re-emergence of randomised control trials in evaluation of criminal justice policy: opportunity and risks. Malcolm Ramsay, Davnet Cassidy and Duncan Stewart (Home Office) SPCR (Surveying Prisoner Crime Reduction) and linked cohort studies: developing improved research methods for the Correctional Services Chair: Chris Hale (University of Kent) 6. Gender, Crime and Punishment Mechthild Bereswill (University of Hanover) The ambivalence of closed institutions – imprisonment from the perspective of male adolescents Tres-Ann Cooke (University of Kent) Inside out: black foreign national women in UK prisons Helen May (University of Plymouth) Prison governance and male prisoner identity: the penal constitution of masculinity Maria Kaspersson (University of Greenwich) Reading Lombroso: female born criminals or patriarchal victims? Chair: Anne Worrall (Keele University)

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7. Supporting Victims and Witnesses Roger Evans (Liverpool John Moores University), Mandy Burton (University of Leicester) and Andrew Sanders (University of Manchester) Are special measures for vulnerable and intimidated witnesses working? Evidence from the criminal justice agencies Matthew Hall (University of Sheffield) Getting stories across: the centrality of the victim in criminal trials Lesley Simmonds (University of Plymouth) Victim support: beyond professional justice and back Chair: Sam Lewis (University of Leeds) 8. Prosecuting and Sentencing Offenders and Criminal Justice Institutions Selda Dagistanli (University of Western Sydney) If the Judiciary were real people: the impact of moral panics on sentencing Lyn Hancock (University of Liverpool) and Roger Matthews (South Bank University) Juries in criminal trials: citizenship and public participation Marie Smyth and Ian Craig (Criminal Justice Inspection, Northern Ireland) Prospectus for a new Criminal Justice Inspectorate in Northern Ireland Chair: Vicky Kemp (Legal Services Research Centre) 9. The Politics of Penality: multi-level governance, institutional dynamics and social change Alistair Henry (University of Edinburgh) From policy to practice: situated learning in community safety partnerships Trevor Jones (Cardiff University) The globalisation of punishment? Exploring the politics of sentencing in the USA and the UK Lesley McAra (University of Edinburgh) Small is beautiful? Punishment, institutional transformation and the dynamics of devolution James Sheptycki (York University, Toronto) The organised crime discourse of multi-level governance: symbolic influences and practical agenda setting from the G7/8 to your front gate Chair: Tim Newburn (LSE)

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10. Violence in Schools: young people as agents of change Helen Cowie and Nicky Hutson Engaging the bystander through peer support

(University of Surrey)

Carol Hayden (University of Portsmouth) Children’s behaviour and schooling: what is government policy trying to achieve? Dawn Jennifer (Roehampton University), Helen Cowie (University of Surrey) and Diane Bray (Roehampton University) Bully dance: animation as a tool for conflict resolution Julie Shaughnessy School violence: The role of the organisation

(Roehampton University)

Chair: Carrie Myers (University of Surrey) 11. Hate Crime Anthony Goodman and Amanda Loumansky (Middlesex University) Researching hate crime in diverse boroughs in London, some preliminary findings Chester L. Quarles (University of Mississippi) From British Israelism to American identity: an analysis of the radical right white American religious racist Chair: Jon Garland (University of Leicester) 12. Geographies of Crime I Peter Klerks Pilot-project ‘analysis of infrastructures’

(Police Academy of the Netherlands)

Charatdao Kongmuang (University of Leeds), Graham Clarke (University of Leeds), Andrew Evans (University of Leeds), Dimitris Ballas (University of Sheffield) A spatial microsimulation approach to modelling crime Andromachi Tseloni (University of Macedonia) Multilevel modelling of the number of property crimes: household and area effects Chair: Graham Clarke (University of Leeds)

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13. Sex Offenders and Public Protection Caroline Metcalf (Buckinghamshire Chilterns University College) The social construction of sex offenders in the Probation Service Mike Nash (University of Portsmouth) Public protection – everyone’s watching but is anyone listening? Tim Turner (Coventry University) Multi-agency public protection panels: partnerships in covert surveillance? Chair: Mike Nellis (University of Birmingham) 14. Restorative Justice in Practice Venezia Kingi and Jeremy Robertson (Victoria University of Wellington) Evaluation of a New Zealand court referred adult restorative justice pilot David O’Mahony, Helen Beckett and Catriona Campbell (Queen’s University, Belfast) A restorative approach to youth offending: youth conferencing in Northern Ireland Ester Ragonese (Liverpool John Moores University) Reprimands and warnings re-visited: populist punitiveness or restorative justice Chair: Gerry Johnstone (University of Hull) 15. Family Violence and Repeat Victimisation Carla Machado Culture and family violence

(Universidade do Minho)

Christopher D. Maxwell (Michigan State University and the University of Michigan) Preventing repeat incidents of intimate partner violence: analysis of data from three field experiments Sheila Royo Maxwell (Michigan State University) The salience of family violence on antisocial behaviours of Filipino adolescents Chair: Teela Sanders (University of Leeds)

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16. Reforming Performance Iain Beattie (University of Kent) and Tom Cockroft (Canterbury Christchurch University College) Square pegs and round holes: using quantitative indicators in police performance Mark Button, Tom Williamson and Les Johnston (University of Portsmouth) Too many chiefs and not enough chief executives: barriers to the development of PFI in the British police service Sirpa Virta (University of Tampere) Intelligence-led community or community-led intelligence? Chair: David Wall (University of Leeds) 17. Controlling Anti-Social Behaviour Jane Donoghue (University of Stirling) Anti-social behaviour orders and civil liberties: striking a balance? Mary Rogan (Trinity College, Dublin) Reassessing the role of the criminal law: perspectives on anti-social behaviour legislation Katherine S. Williams (University of Wales, Aberystwyth) Modern witch hunts: appeasing fear not controlling behaviour Chair: Adam Crawford (University of Leeds) 18. Feminist Criminologies: A Roundtable Discussion Loraine Gelsthorpe (University of Cambridge), Marisa Silvesti (South Bank University), Frances Heidensohn (Goldsmiths College, London), Joanna Phoenix (University of Bath) Chair: Emma Wincup (University of Leeds)

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19. Author Meets Critics I Pat O’Malley (Carleton University) ‘Risk, Uncertainty and Government’ (2004) Cavendish Publishing Critics: Richard Ericson (University of Toronto) Barbara Hudson (University of Central Lancashire) Kevin Stenson (Buckinghamshire Chilterns University College) Chair: Toby Seddon (University of Leeds) This session will be followed by a reception sponsored by Cavendish Publishing 20. Authors Meets Critics II Penny Green and Tony Ward (University of Hull) ‘State Crime: Governments, Violence and Corruption’ (2004) Pluto Press Critic: Gary Fooks (London South Bank University) Chair: Dave Whyte (University of Stirling)

17.30-18.45

Media Roundtable: Representations of Crime Conference Auditorium

Jane Adams (Crime Writer) Roger Graef (Writer, Film Maker, Broadcaster and Visiting Fellow of Mannheim Centre for Criminology at the LSE) David Rose (Journalist) Chair and discussant: Robert Reiner (LSE)

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Wednesday 13th July

9.30-11.00

Workshop Sessions

21. Racism, Ethnicity and Criminology: A Roundtable Discussion Ben Bowling (Kings College London), Maureen Cain (University of Birmingham), Ruth Chigwada-Bailey (Criminology in the Millennium), Kay Goodall (Glasgow University), Andrew Goodman (Middlesex University), Zoë James (University of Plymouth), Sam Lewis (University of Leeds), Suzella Palmer (University of Luton), Coretta Phillips (London School of Economics), Judith Rowbotham (Nottingham Trent University), Michael Sutton (Nottingham Trent University), Patrick Williams (Greater Manchester Probation Area), Andrew Zurawan (Home Office) Chair: Ben Bowling (Kings College, London) 22. Terrorism, Contingency and Risk II Don Crewe (University of Keele) Risk, dangerisation and trajectories of the self Gabe Mythen (Manchester Metropolitan University), Sandra Walklate (Manchester Metropolitan University) and Tony Kearon (University of Keele) Negotiating the terrorist risk: public perceptions of government advice Chair: Clive Walker (University of Leeds) 23. Police Complaints: Awareness, Attitudes and Experiences Maria Docking and Tom Bucke (Independent Police Complaints Commission) The complaints system: awareness of the IPCC, willingness to complain, and public confidence Tiggey May and Hamish Warburton (King’s College, London) Different shades of grey: the experiences of officers and complainants of locally resolved complaints Graham Smith (Nottingham Trent University) Civil actions against the police: challenging the politics of discreditability Chair: Mike Maguire (Cardiff University)

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24. Restorative Justice Anna M. Eriksson (Queen’s University, Belfast) Bottom-up transitional justice: community-based restorative justice and transformation of cultures of violence in Northern Ireland Gerry Johnstone (University of Hull) and Daniel Van Ness (Prison Fellowship International) The meaning of restorative justice Helen Miles and Peter Raynor (University of Wales, Swansea) Empowering communities to exercise social control: the use of re-integrative shaming and pro-social modelling processes during informal dispute resolution at local level Chair: Joanna Shapland (University of Sheffield) 25. The Politics of Prostitution Roger Matthews Policing prostitution: ten years on

(London South Bank University)

Jane Scoular (University of Strathclyde) and Maggie O’Neill (University of Loughborough) Inclusion/exclusion and the politics of prostitution reform Chair: Teela Sanders (University of Leeds) 26. Policing, Surveillance, Leisure and Alcohol Louise Jackson (Leeds Metropolitan University) Policing youth: gender, leisure and surveillance in post-war Manchester Paul Jennings Policing the pub

(University of Bradford)

Doug Sharp, Kate Williams and Susie Atherton (University of Central England) Cruising for a boozing: a study of two arrest referral schemes Chair: George Mair (Liverpool John Moores University)

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27. Burglary: Prediction and Prevention Kate Bowers and Shane Johnston Burglary prediction: a study of flow and friction

(University College, London)

Rob Mawby and Carol Jones (University of Plymouth) Evaluation of a national burglary reduction initiative targeting older people Simon Shu Chih-Feng (Feng Chia University) Spatial Layout and vulnerability of burglary – case studies from the UK and Taiwan Chair: Colin Dunnighan (University of Teesside) 28. Histories of Violence Robert Shoemaker (University of Sheffield) th The modernisation of violence in 18 Century England Martin Wiener Criminal trials and the historian

(Rice University, Texas)

Chair: Azrini Wahidin (University of Kent) 29. Youth Transitions, Social Exclusion and Crime: The Teesside Studies Robert MacDonald (University of Teesside) Researching extended youth transitions on Teesside Mark Simpson Corkscrew heroin careers

(University of Teesside)

Colin Webster (University of Teesside) Predicting criminal careers through risk assessment: an empirical critique using longitudinal qualitative data Chair: Emma Wincup (University of Leeds) 30. New Penologies of Control Steven Hutchinson (Carleton University) A 'culture of control'? Canadian criminal justice and the persistence of penal optimism Nickolas John James (University of Queensland) Surveillance and performance in the panoptic state Fergus McNeill and Nicky Burns (Glasgow School of Social Work) From redemption to risk? Social enquiry and the new penology Chair: Barbara Hudson (University of Central Lancashire)

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31. War Crime Philip Carney The Spectacle of Guantánamo

(Middlesex University)

Estelle Zinsstag (Queen’s University, Belfast) Gender-based sexual crimes in armed conflict: the unspoken consequences for women Chair: Richard Wild (University of Greenwich) 32. Cyber-Crimes Michael McGuire (London Metropolitan University) Rustling the net curtain: some locally deviant behaviours in cyberspace Brian Tompsett, Natasha Semmens and Angus Marshall (University of Sheffield) Digital recidivism - cyber-criminal career development Matthew Williams (Cardiff University) Policing and cybersociety: the maturation of regulation within an online community Chair: David Wall (University of Leeds) 33. Green Criminology Gill Cathles The insurrectionary imagination

(Independent)

Nigel South (University of Essex) Bio-piracy, the theft of nature and the development of green criminology Reece Walters (University of Stirling) Crime, bio-agriculture and the exploitation of hunger Chair: Carole McCartney (University of Leeds) 34. Mental Illness and Offending Liz Frondigoun Violent bodies questioned?

(Glasgow Caledonian University)

Jonathon E. Lynch (London School of Economics) Omissions and acts: the use of force on mentally ill people Kirán Sarma (University of Limerick) Gun ownership and mental illness: civil rights vs. public and personal safety Chair: Lynda Crowley-Cyr (James Cook University)

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35. Community Cohesion and Public Policing Gordon Hughes (Open University) Safe havens, asylum and community cohesion: the politics of safety and the problem of ‘the stranger’ Martin Innes (University of Surrey) Social control, insecurity and the development trajectories of urban communities Matthew Long Civil renewal and public policing

(Sheffield Hallam University)

Chair: Tim Newburn (LSE) 36. Trans-national Corporate Crime Hazel Croall Following the food chain of crime?

(Glasgow Caledonian University)

Anna Markovska (Canterbury Christ Church University College) and Anna Isaeva (University of Luton) A cure for all ills: Western pharmaceutical companies in the Ukraine James W. Williams (University of Windsor, Canada) Visions of financial disorder: reflections on financial surveillance in the securities industry Chair: Mike Levi (Cardiff University) 37. Cultural Criminology: crime, liminality and social justice? Maddy Coy (Loughborough University) An identity of (in)difference: women who sell sex and criminology Zinthiya Ganeshpanchan (Staffordshire University) Cultural violence among refugee and internally displaced women in the context of armed conflict Maggie O’Neill (Loughborough University) Crime, Justice and Cultural Criminology: Ethno-Mimesis as Performative Praxis Mike Presdee (University of Kent) Theatres of crime and violence: crime and the spectacle of everyday violence Chair: Keith Hayward (University of Kent)

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38. Housing and Anti-Social Behaviour Sarah Blandy (University of Leeds) Gated communities: desired and other effects on crime and anti-social behaviour John Flint Housing and the new governance of conduct

(University of Glasgow)

Anwen Jones Shelter inclusion project: an evaluation

(University of York)

Judy Nixon and Sadie Parr (Sheffield Hallam University) Anti-social behaviour: voices from the frontline. Chair: Adam Crawford (University of Leeds) 39. Driving and Crime Laura Brasnett (Home Office) Drink-driving: prevalence and attitudes in England and Wales 2002 Susan Donkin and Melanie Wellsmith (University College London) Cars stolen in burglaries: the Sandwell experience Helen Wells (Keele University) The fast and the furious: understanding objections to speed enforcement in a risk society Chair: Roy Light (University of the West of England)

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11.30 – 13.00

Workshop Sessions

40. The Commodification of Probation George Mair (Liverpool John Moores University), Fergus McNeill (Glasgow School of Social Work) and Patricia McCullock (University of Dundee), Mike Nellis (University of Birmingham) Chair: Anthea Hucklesby (University of Leeds) 41. Offenders’ Families Rachel Condry (London School of Economics) Relatives of serious offenders: gender and the broader impact of crime Helen Codd (University of Central Lancashire) The collateral consequences of mass imprisonment: a cautionary tale or a vision of the future? Chris Grover Crime, families and social policy

(Lancaster University)

Chair: Neal Hazel (University of Salford) 42. Cultural Criminology Now Jeff Ferrell Empires of illicit meaning

(Texas Christian University)

Keith Hayward and Majid Yar (University of Kent) The Chav’ phenomenon: consumption, identity and the media construction of the new underclass Jock Young (John Jay College) Cultural criminology and the vertigo of late modernity Chair: Simon Hallsworth (London Metropolitan University)

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43. Terrorism, Contingency and Risk III Simon McKay Surveillance and terrorism

(McKay & Partners)

Jason Roach (UCL), Paul Ekblom (Central St Martin’s College of Art and Design) and Richard Flynn (University of Leicester) The conjunction of terrorist opportunity: a framework for diagnosing and preventing acts of terrorism Clive Walker Terrorism and intelligence

(University of Leeds)

Chair: Carole McCartney (University of Leeds) 44. Drugs, Neighbourhoods and Risk Factors Judith Aldridge and Juanjo Medina Youth gangs in an English city: drug economies

(University of Manchester)

Stephen Case Factors shaping substance use by young people

(University of Wales, Swansea)

Susan McVie (University of Edinburgh) Does neighbourhood have the same effect on crime and drug use? Chair: Toby Seddon (University of Leeds) 45. Victims’ Perspectives I Carol Jones (University of Plymouth) The tourist victim, fact or fiction: identifying the needs of tourists who are victims of crime in England Vicky Kemp and Nigel Balmer (Legal Services Research Centre) Assessing legal need and examining the relationship between social exclusion and crime control Karen Lysaght (Dublin Institute of Technology) Negotiating landscapes of fear: gendered time-space strategies in the divided city Chair: Alana Diamond (Home Office)

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46. Influences on Recidivism Nicola Hughes Recidivism in Ireland

(University College Dublin)

Helen Poole and Tony Colombo Making sense of justice: a prisoner’s perspective

(Coventry University)

Chair: Doug Sharp (University of Central England) 47. Youth Offending: Theoretical and Methodological Considerations Monica Barry (University of Stirling) Young offending and youth transitions: the age/crime curve revisited David A. Bowers (University of South Alabama), Jennifer LanghinrichsenRohling (University of South Alabama) and Catalina Arata (Independent) Race, social bonding, and delinquency: perspectives from an urban high school in the American south Jonathan Ilan (Dublin Institute of Technology) Sidestepping Secrecy: ethnographic methods in the study of youth crime Cathy Murray (University of Stirling) Young people’s resistance to and desistance from offending Chair: Lesley McAra (Edinburgh University) 48. Alcohol, Crime and Disorder Gavin Dingwall (De Montfort University) Will the government’s ‘blitz’ on ‘alcohol-related’ crime and disorder work? Sian Matthews and Anna Richardson (Home Office) Findings from Crime and Justice Survey 2003: alcohol-related crime and disorder Deborah Talbot (Roehampton University) Some reflections on the role of context in ‘alcohol-related disorder’ Chair: Michael Shiner (LSE)

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49. Histories of Crime and Justice Alyson Brown (Edge Hill College of Higher Education) A ‘ringside seat’ at the mutiny: large-scale prison riots at Chatham in 1861 and Dartmoor in 1932 Laura Piacenti (University of Stirling) People, places and memories of imprisonment: an untold criminological story Christina Quinlan (Dublin City University) Hucksters, whores and hopeless cases: a history of women imprisoned in Ireland Chair: Louise Jackson (Leeds Metropolitan University) 50. Governing Anti-Social Behaviour and Crime Prevention Trevor Bradley (University of Wellington) Taking the community out of community crime prevention Elizabeth Burney (University of Cambridge) Making people behave in Britain, the Netherlands and Sweden Dominic Wood (Canterbury Christ Church University College) Defining anti-social behaviour from a ‘negative conception of freedom’ perspective Chair: Gordon Hughes (Open University) 51. Policing and Social Change: seeing is believing Adam Crawford Reassurance policing: ‘feeling is believing’

(University of Leeds)

Vanessa Jones and Martin Innes Policing as an agent of social change

(University of Surrey)

Ian Loader Policing, recognition and belonging

(University of Oxford)

Chair: Adam Crawford (University of Leeds)

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52. Sexuality and the Law Harry Cocks (Birkbeck College) The homosexual of law: defining homosexual behaviour in Britain, c 1750-1900 Pamela Cox Imagining the Sexual Subject

(University of Essex)

Anne-Marie Kilday (Oxford Brookes University) Herod’s handmaidens: women and infanticide in the pre-modern period Chair: Teela Sanders (University of Leeds) 53. Pyschosocial re-interpretations of Shaw’s Jackroller case study: Part I Tony Jefferson and David Gadd (Keele University) On the defensive: a psychoanalytically-informed psychosocial reading of the JackRoller Anke Neuber and Almut Koesling (University of Hanover) The ‘home-sickness’ of the Jack Roller: the underlying conflicts of a delinquent boy’s own story Amanda Matravers and Shadd Maruna (University of Cambridge) Narrative revisions: two versions of the Jackroller’s ‘own story’ Chair: Loraine Gelsthorpe (University of Cambridge) 54. State Crime and Rwandan Genocide Hazel Cameron Death by denial in Rwanda

(University of Stirling)

Linda Melvern (University of Wales, Aberystwyth) Conspiracy to murder: the Rwandan genocide Chair: Dave Whyte (University of Stirling)

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55. Geographies of Crime II Daniel Birks (University College London) Computational criminology: a multi-agent simulation of volume crime activity. Alex Hirshfield The crime analysis framework.

(University of Huddersfield)

Peter Shepherd, John Stillwell and Graham Clarke (University of Leeds) Identifying patterns of crime: a neighbourhood classification approach. Chair: Norman Davidson (University of Hull) 56. Young People, Violence and Regulation Susan A. Batchelor (University of Strathclyde) The excitement and emotionality of young women’s violent crime Marian FitzGerald, Chris Hale and Alex Stevens (University of Kent) Youth violence in Europe: trends, policies and responses. Carrie Anne Myers (University of Surrey) Violence in a rural school – policing the playground Chair: Roger Evans (Liverpool John Moores University) 57. Putting Restorative Justice to the Test Helen Beckett, Catriona Campbell, David O’Mahony A restorative approach to youth offending: youth conferencing in Northern Ireland Joanna Shapland (University of Sheffield), Anne Atkinson (University of Sheffield), Helen Atkinson (University of Sheffield), Becca Chapman (Home Office), Emily Colledge (University of Sheffield), James Dignan (University of Sheffield), Marie Howes (University of Sheffield), Jennifer Johnstone (University of Sheffield), Gwen Robinson (University of Sheffield) and Angela Sorsby (University of Sheffield) Situating restorative justice within criminal justice Aidan Wilcox and Richard Young How green was Thames Valley? The rhetoric and reality of resanctioning rates for restorative cautions Chair: Gerry Johnstone (University of Hull)

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58. Race, Religion and Prisons Hindpal Singh Bhui (HM Inspector of Prisons) Findings from a thematic inspection of race issues in the Prison Service Elena Marchetti (Griffith University) The Australian Royal Commission into Aboriginal deaths in custody and its failure to take a race and gender approach in its investigation Basia Spalek and Salah el-Hassan Muslim converts in prison

(University of Birmingham)

Chair: Sam Lewis (University of Leeds)

13.15-14.15

BSC AGM Lecture Theatre 1, Roger Stevens Building

14.15-15.30

Plenary

Conference Auditorium

The Criminalization of Risk Richard Ericson (University of Toronto) Criminalization and the politics of uncertainty Mike Levi (Cardiff University) Public and private sector constructs of risk in business crime – signs of convergence? Chair: David Wall (University of Leeds)

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16.00-17.30

Workshop Sessions

59. Roundtable on the Work of Zygmunt Bauman and its Contribution to Criminology Zygmunt Bauman (University of Leeds) Hans Boutellier (Free University of Amsterdam and Verwey-Jonker Institute) Barbara Hudson (University of Central Lancashire) Richard Sparks (University of Edinburgh) Jock Young (John Jay College) Chair: Adam Crawford (University of Leeds) 60. Protecting Children Anne-Marie McAlinden (Queen’s University, Belfast) Grooming for sexual abuse: personal, social and institutional factors Nigel Parton (University of Huddersfield) Safeguarding childhood: early intervention and surveillance in a late modern society Katherine S. Williams (University of Wales, Aberystwyth) Children and sexuality: marketing and controlling innocence Chair: Mike Nash (University of Portsmouth) 61. White-Collar Crime Kati Rantala (Police College of Finland) The investigation of organised crime as a project Simone White Procurement fraud and corruption

(European Commission: Anti-Fraud office)

Majid Yar (University of Kent) The global dilemmas of intellectual property crime: the case of dangerous counterfeit pharmaceuticals Chair: Mike Levi (Cardiff University)

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62. Qualitative and Quantitative Fieldwork Jacqui Karn Snowballing in the rain

(London School of Economics)

Barbara Mason The challenges of prison research

(London School of Economics)

Carrie Myers (University of Surrey) ‘The native who went sociological: the problems of researching the familiar’ Kate Steward (London School of Economics) Magistrates’ Courts: undertaking research in a public place Chair: Maureen Cain (University of Birmingham) 63. Persistent and Prolific Offenders Elaine Arnull Persistent youth offending: a retrospective study

(Middlesex University)

Rosie Erol and Andrew Millie (University of Wolverhampton) Managing prolific offenders: getting ready for the priority and prolific offenders programme Chair: Anthony Goodman (University of Essex) 64. Murder Peter Morrall Murder – why is it fascinating?

(University of Leeds)

Stephen Shute (University of Birmingham) Punishing murderers: release procedures and the ‘tariff’, 1953-2004 Catriona Woolner (Middlesex University) A Tale of Two Cities: victims of homicide in London and New York at the close of the 20th Century Chair: Martin Innes (University of Surrey)

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65. Police Ethics Olga Pleshkova Human rights in policing: a comparative study

(University of Nottingham)

Stephen Tong (Canterbury Christ Church University College) Sink or swim: a case study of detective training Chair: Matt Long (Sheffield Hallam University) 66. Rights in Criminal Justice Kieran McEvoy (Queen’s University, Belfast) Critical junctures in legal culture: judges, lawyers and human rights in transition Peter Squires (University of Brighton) Responsibilisation by other means: the self defence debate Richard Wild (University of Greenwich) The death penalty in Uzbekistan: research activism? Chair: Clive Walker (University of Leeds) 67. Deaths in Prison Barry Goldson (University of Liverpool) In the care of the state? Child deaths in penal custody in England and Wales Alison Liebling (University of Cambridge) Small facts and large issues: prison suicide, penal cultures and the paradox of ‘prevention’ Chair: Finola Farrant (Howard League for Penal Reform) 68. Prostitution, Violence and Safety Gillian Hunter Tackling client violence in female street sex work

(King’s College, London)

Suzanne Jenkins (Keele University) Prostitution online: added safety or new security risks? Teela Sanders (University of Leeds) and Rosie Campbell (Nacro) Violence, protection and safety in the UK indoor sex work market Chair: Roger Matthews (London South Bank University)

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69. Evaluating the Drug Treatment and Testing Order Alex Stevens (University of Kent), Russell Turner (National Probation Service, West Yorkshire), Paul Turnbull (King’s College, London) and Rowdy Yates (University of Stirling) Chair: Toby Seddon (University of Leeds) 70. Histories of Crime and Justice: Policing as a Public Service Vicky Conway (Queen’s University, Belfast) An Garda Siochana: the legitimate birth of a police force? Chris A. Williams (Open University) Constables for hire: the long and significant history of private 'public' policing in the UK Chair: Louise Jackson (Leeds Metropolitan University) 71. Domestic Violence, Service Provision and Multi-Agency Provisions Alana Diamond and Corinne Charles (Home Office) Domestic violence and crime and disorder reduction partnerships: findings from a self-completion questionnaire Nicola Groves (University of Sunderland) Making connections: women, domestic violence and substance misuse Kirsty Welsh (University of Sheffield) The disassociation between domestic violence service provision and multi-agency initiatives on domestic violence Chair: Maggie O’Neill (Loughborough University) 72. Trans-national Policing Ben Bowling (King’s College London) Transatlantic police cooperation: the complex case of Anglo Caribbean links Maurice Punch (London School of Economics) From anything goes to zero tolerance; policy transfer and transformation in Dutch policing Chair: James Sheptycki (York University, Toronto)

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73. Youth and Anti-Social Behaviour Matt Bowden (University of Dublin) The governance of youth disorder in urban Ireland: state and civil society networks and the mobilisation of community Joanna Sadler (Middlesex University) Implementing the youth ‘anti-social behaviour’ agenda: policing the Ashton estate Dawn Stephen (University of Brighton) Unwrapping precautionary injustice: time to rekindle a more creative criminology of youth Chair: Kevin Stenson (Buckinghamshire Chilterns University College) 74. Psychosocial re-interpretations of Shaw’s Jackroller case study: Part II Mechthild Bereswill (University of Hanover) Between sad story, life history and hidden conflicts: an in-depth hermeneutic rereading of the Jack Roller Alison Brown Interpreters of the case study

(University of Stirling)

Loraine Gelsthorpe (University of Cambridge) Whose story? An exploration of some psychoanalytical dimensions of the research process Chair: Shadd Maruna (University of Cambridge) 75. Geographies of Crime III Chris Brunsdon, Gary Higgs and Jon Corcoran (University of Glamorgan) Does weather affect the location of urban crime Spencer Chaney How accurate is my hotspot map?

(University of London)

Andrew Evans (University of Leeds) and Tim Waters (City of Bradford Metropolitan District Council Mapping the fear of crime: capturing fuzzy ‘venacular’ geography Chair: Alex Hirshfield (University of Huddersfield)

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76. Using OASys as an Assessment Tool Diana Fitzgibbon (Hertfordshire University) The impact of pre-emptive criminalisation on professional discourses and practice Philip Howard, Danny Clark, Nicola Valis (Home Office) Targeting to offending behaviour programmes using OASys George Mair, Lol Burke and Stuart Taylor (Liverpool John Moores University) OASys: a survey of probation officers’ views Chair: Gwen Robinson (University of Sheffield) 77. Minority Ethnic Perspectives on Criminal Justice Bankole Cole, Sue Adamson, Norman Davidson, Bano Murtuja and Gary Craig (University of Hull) Diversity in confidence: minority ethnic views of the criminal justice system in West Yorkshire Tom Ellis (University of Portsmouth) Reducing racism in the police: is training the answer? Amanda Matravers (University of Cambridge) and Andromachi Tseloni (University of Macedonia) Cases for change? Complaints against ethnic minority police officers Andromachi Tseloni (University of Macedonia) and Amanda Matravers (University of Cambridge) Exploring racial disparities in the police Chair: Sam Lewis (University of Leeds) 78. Crime, Media, Culture Journal Launch and Reception sponsored by Sage Publications Steve Hall (Northumbria University) and Simon Winlow (University of York) Eugene McLaughlin (City University) Tim Newburn (LSE) Laura Piacentini (University of Stirling) Chairs: Yvonne Jewkes, Chris Greer and Jeff Ferrell

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17.30 Book Launch ‘Criminology’ and its companion website Editors: Chris Hale, Keith Hayward, Azrini Wahidin, Emma Wincup and Paul Dougan Sponsored by Oxford University Press

17.45-18.45

Criminology Benchmarking Forum

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Thursday 14th July

9.30-11.00

Workshop Sessions

79. Innovations in Visible Police Patrols Stuart Lister (University of Leeds) The thickening blue line: visible patrols and the rise and rise of police community support officers. Alison Wakefield Carry on constable? Evaluating foot patrol

(City University)

Chair: Tim Newburn (LSE) 80. Governing the Behaviour of Young People Neal Hazel (University of Salford) Young offenders’ perceptions of the police Lynn Keightley-Smith Police decision making in the quasi court

(Sunderland University)

Roy Light (University of the West of England) Young people and alcohol: lawyers, loopholes and lacunae Chair: Sam Lewis (University of Leeds)

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81. Victims’ Perspectives II Tom Daems and Robert Luc Victims, knowledge(s) and prisons

(Katholieke Universiteit Leuven)

J. Scott Kenney (Memorial University), Alfredo Schulte-Bockholt (Saint Mary’s University) and Luis Augusto Sepulveda (Saint Mary’s University) Issues of criminology and victimology in the developed and developing world Nicola O’Leary (University of Hull) Knowing your place: mediated representations of victim communities Chair: Natasha Semmens (University of Sheffield) 82. Responding to sexual assault: lessons from UK research Liz Kelly Attrition in reported rape cases

(London Metropolitan University)

Jo Lovett (London Metropolitan University) The role of sexual assault referral centres (SARCS) Linda Regan (London Metropolitan University) The first forensic nurse examiner service in the UK Chair: Teela Sanders (University of Leeds) 83. Constructing Narratives Michelle Butler (University of Cambridge) Prisoner self-narratives, social-information processing and confrontations in prison Maritza Felices-Luna (University of Montreal) Career “terrorists”: analysing the involvement in anti-establishment armed groups as a process Raquel Matos and Carla Machado (University of Minho) Unusual lives of usual girls: the narrative construction of deviant trajectories Chair: Maria Kaspersson (University of Greenwich)

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84. Gangs and Collective Delinquency Simon Hallsworth Reinterpreting collective delinquency

(London Metropolitan University)

Julian Tanner and Scot Wortley Youth gangs of Toronto?

(University of Toronto)

Tara Young Girls and the gang

(London Metropolitan University)

Chair: Susan Batchelor (University of Strathclyde) 85. Human Rights in a Global Context Mehmet Arican Crimes beyond borders and the Turkish approach

(Police Academy of Turkey)

Noel McGuirk (University of Ulster) Human rights, international legal standards and humanitarian law: a way to address deaths in conflicts? Conor O'Reilly (Queen’s University Belfast) State/corporate symbiosis: the role of security consultants in Iraq Chair: Maurice Punch (LSE) 86. Punishment in the 21st Century Emma Bell (Université Lumière Lyon II) Excluding the excluded: New Labour’s penchant for punishment Mark Brown (University of Melbourne) Punishment and quarantine: rethinking liberal strategies of punitive exclusion Bill Munro (University of Stirling) Punishment in transition: social control in post-liberal societies Chair: Barbara Hudson (University of Central Lancashire)

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87. Race, Community and Crime Marta Bolognani (University of Leeds) Community criminologies and local discourses: preliminary findings from fieldwork with minority ethnic informants in Bradford Lucy Michael (Keele University) Community leadership and social control in British Muslim communities Muzammil Quraishi (University of Salford) No-go zones: racially constructed urban spaces in the UK and Pakistan Chair Basia Spalek (University of Birmingham) 88. Violence, Prejudice and Homophobia Frazer M. Somjen (Oxford University) (In)Visible targets: gendered experiences of safety and violence among lesbian, gay, and bisexual people

Stephen Tomsen Theorising violent sexual prejudice

(University of Sydney)

Chair: Maureen Cain (University of Birmingham) 89. Drugs and Criminal Justice Chris Fox (Matrix Research and Consultancy Ltd) Evaluating the drug interventions programme for children and young people using a 'theories of change' approach Michael Shiner (London School of Economics) Drugs, community and the culture of control Paul Turnbull (King’s College London) Criminal justice intervention teams: can they work? Chair: Toby Seddon (University of Leeds)

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90. Policing Diversity Christopher C. Cooper (Saint Xavier University, Chicago) Subjective state’s of mind and custodial arrest: race-based policing Zoë James (University of Plymouth) Guerrilla tactics: the policing of new travellers Faiza Qureshi (Loughborough University) The impact of extended police stop and search powers under the Criminal Justice Act 2003: an evaluation in a Southern town Chair: Neil Chakraborti (University of Leicester) 91. Black, White and Shades of Grey: race, racisms and policing in postindustrial Britain Bill Dixon (Keele University) Racially motivated crime in context: racism, reputation and respect David Gadd and Tony Jefferson (Keele University) Deconstructing racial motivation: the biographical analysis of perpetrators’ life stories Matthew Millings (Keele University) Policing identities: understanding the role of policing in the negotiated cultural formations of young Asian men Chair: Ben Bowling (King’s College, London) 92. Resettlement of Prisoners Stephen Farrall and Adam Calverley Desistance: an emotional journey

(Keele University)

Alina Haines and Kirsty Hudson Releasing the potential workforce

(Cardiff University)

Mairead Seymour (Dublin Institute of Technology) From the streets to the prison cell and back again: progression routes of homeless offenders Chair: Peter Raynor (University of Wales, Swansea)

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93. Community Safety Kath O’Connor (Manchester Metropolitan University) Same aim: different goal. The effect of partner agency agendas, cultures and performance indicators on improving local community safety Layla Skinns (King’s College, London) Cops, councils and crime and disorder: a critical review of three community safety partnerships Richard Teagle (University of Plymouth) Youth interventions: decision making in a crime and disorder reduction partnerships Chair: Gordon Hughes (Open University) 94. Cultural Representations of Crime, Criminals and Criminal Justice Michael Fiddler (Keele University) Projecting the prison: the depiction of the uncanny and homely in contemporary prison drama Timo Harrikari (University of Helsinki) The status of minors and changing presentations of crime in the Nordic countries Craig Osmond (University of Western Sydney) Suspending the law of revenge for an ethical relation with the subject of punishment Chair: Chris Greer (University of Northumbria) 95. Psychological Approaches to Criminological Research Jeanette Garwood Perceiving criminal opportunity?

(Leeds Metropolitan University)

Kieran McCartan (University of Leicester) As long as everyone’s reading from the same map we’ll get there in the end: forensic psychology as an interdisciplinary subject and its links to criminology Chair: Charlotte Bilby (University of Leicester)

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96. Electronic Monitoring Mike Nellis The future of electronic monitoring

(University of Birmingham)

Craig Paterson and Kevin Stenson (Buckinghamshire Chilterns University College) Sub-contracting sovereign power? Understanding ‘commercial criminal justice’ and the electronic monitoring of offenders Chair: Anthea Hucklesby (University of Leeds) 97. Police Officers and Ethical Dilemmas Colin Dunninghan (University of Teesside) An exploration of the ethical orientation of English police officers Colin Dunninghan (University of Teesside) The boundaries of the integrity of a sample of English police officers Kevin Pitt (University of Teesside) An exploratory study of some of the factors leading to police corruption Chair: David Wall (University of Leeds) 98. Geographies of Crime IV Robert Haining and Jane Law (University of Cambridge) Identifying high intensity crime areas: comparing police perceptions with the offence and offender data in Sheffield. Carol Hayden (University of Portsmouth), Tom Williamson (University of Portsmouth), Richard Webber (University College, London) School, neighbourhoods and young offenders: can geo-demographic analysis inform community programmes and policing? Andrew Newton (University of Huddersfield) Crime on bus corridors: the link between the internal environment (on bus) and changing external environment traversed en-route. Chair: Chris Lewis (University of Portsmouth)

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11.30-13.00

Workshop Sessions

99. Researching Sensitive Topics Finola Farrant (Howard League for Penal Reform) Conducting qualitative interviews within a prison setting Mark Israel (Flinders University) Scary stuff? Uses and abuses of informed consent in criminology Basia Spalek (University of Birmingham), Jon Garland (University of Leicester) and Neil Chakraborti (University of Leicester) Hearing lost voices: issues in researching ‘hidden’ minority ethnic communities Chair: Azrini Wahidin (University of Kent) 100. Media Representations of Crime and Justice Martina Feilzer (University of Oxford) The impact of a factual newspaper column on crime on readers of a local newspaper Elaine Fishwick (University of Western Sydney) Have I got news for you: the media’s influence on criminal justice law and policy reform Chris Greer (Northumbria University) Delivering death: capital punishment and the American news media Chair: Craig Webber (University of Southampton) 101. Initiatives in Criminal Justice Susan Eley Drug courts and the process of hybridisation

(University of Stirling)

Claire Hamilton (Dublin Institute of Technology) A tale of two criminal justice bills: whittling the golden thread Matthew Long, Paul Senior and Chris Crowther-Dowey (Sheffield Hallam University) Understanding the modernisation of criminal justice Chair: Stephen Parrott (Birkbeck College)

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102. Sex Offenders Belinda Brooks-Gordon (University of London) and Charlotte Bilby (University of Leicester) Systematic review of the literature on juvenile sexual offenders Keith Soothill (Lancaster University), Juliet Harman (Lancaster University), Brian Francis (Lancaster University) and Stuart Kirby (Lancashire Constabulary) Identifying future repeat danger from sexual offenders against children: a focus on those convicted and those strongly suspected of such crime Chair: Mike Nash (University of Portsmouth) 103. Probation in the 21st Century Brian Heath and Helen Miles (Jersey Probation and After Care Service) Can alternatives to custody deliver? An examination of customer focussed product development and marketing in a British probation service! Natalia Hanley (University of Manchester) Probation Service responses and attitudes towards gang culture in Manchester Chair: Peter Raynor (University of Wales, Swansea) 104. Licensed Premises and Social Control Phil Hadfield Behind bars: social control in licensed premises

(University of Durham)

Jonathon E. Lynch (London School of Economics) Use of force by door supervisors: perceptions and actions Daniel Silverstone (University of Portsmouth) Guns, drugs and alcohol: three different night-time economies? Louise Westmarland (Open University), Kate O’Brien (University of Durham) and Dick Hobbs (University of Durham) Women bouncers on the door: gender, violence and the night-time economy Chair: Stuart Lister (University of Leeds)

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105. Constructing Law to Tackle Violence Demetra M. Pappas (Seton Hall University) The making of “laci and Conner’s law”: social and legal constructions of “the unborn Victims of Violence Act of 2004” Denis Yomi Tanfa (University Of South Africa) Adjudication of cases involving child victims of rape and indecent assault in GautengSouth Africa Catherine Leung Lai Yee (Hong Kong Baptist University) and Irene Ng Wai Chin (Association Concerning Sexual Violence Against Women) Beyond professional justice: violence and the body Chair: Toby Seddon (University of Leeds) 106. Youth Justice: Theory and Practice Lesley McAra and Susan McVie (University of Edinburgh) What Works revisited: youth justice, cultural context and deviancy amplification Roger Smith Youth offending and the problem of ‘agency’

(University of Leicester)

Anna Souhami (London School of Economics) Constructing inter-agency conflict: identity, change and resistance in a developing YOT Chair: Barry Goldson (University of Liverpool) 107. Security Networks Simon Fox (Southampton Solent University) Plural policing: society’s product and panacea Pat O'Malley and Steven Hutchinson (Carleton University) Urban security networks: fire risks and the development of preventative governance’ Chair: Adam Crawford (University of Leeds)

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108. Policing the Peace: Northern Ireland after the Belfast Agreement Michael Connolly Reforming the RUC.

(University of Glamorgan)

Aogan Mulcahy (University College Dublin) Dealing with the past in ‘a new beginning’: contested memories of policing in Northern Ireland Peter Sproat (University of Teeside) Chasing the mirage? The new policing of terrorist finance in Northern Ireland’ Chair: Jon Moran (University of Wolverhampton) 109. Governing Anti-Social Behaviour Jacqui Karn (London School of Economics) The good, the bad and the ungovernable: legitimising precautionary governance? Andrew Millie (University of Wolverhampton) Anti-social behaviour strategies: a need for balance David Prior and Kathryn Farrow (University of Birmingham) Responding to anti-social behaviour: negotiating top-down imperatives and bottom-up emotions Chair: Dominic Wood (Canterbury Christchurch University College) 110. Criminology, Culture and Indigenous Australian Peoples Harry Blagg (University of Western Australia) Re-awaking and reconciliation: promoting creating hybridity in contemporary Australia Paul Havemann (James Cook University) Triste Tropiques: terra nullius, order building and wasted indigenous lives in Australia Anne Worrall (Keele University) Re-awakening the offending imagination: researching cognitive skills training in Western Australian prisons Chair: Maureen Cain (University of Birmingham)

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111. CCTV: Policy and Practice Benjamin Goold (Oxford University) Regulating Surveillance: CCTV and the protection of privacy in public spaces Leon Hempel (Berlin University of Technology) CCTV: Diffusion and practices in European comparison Angela Spriggs and Daniel Swain (University of Leeds) Assessing the impact of CCTV – what makes it work? Chair: Alison Wakefield (City University) 112. Socially Excluded Young Offenders Christie Barron (Simon Fraser University) A paradigm of exclusion’: the impact of the risk society on female young offenders Patricia Gray (University of Plymouth) Youth justice, social exclusion and the demise of social justice John Minkes (University of Wales, Swansea) Homeless young offenders: an exploratory survey of provision and practice Chair: Emma Wincup (University of Leeds) 113. Gender-based Violence Alana Diamond (Home Office), Marianne Hester (University of Bristol) and Nicole Westmarland (University of Bristol) Tackling domestic violence: effective interventions and approaches Liz Kelly (London Metropolitan University) An integrated strategy on violence against women Sylvia Walby (University of Leeds/Lancaster University) Re-conceptualising domestic violence as crime: theoretical and methodological implications Chair: Teela Sanders (University of Leeds)

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114. Accommodating Prisoners with Special Needs Elaine Crawley (Keele University) Survival, coping and stigma: the imprisonment experiences and release fears of elderly prisoners Victoria Herrington and Gillian Hunter (King’s College London) Offenders with learning disabilities: examining prevalence in one young offenders institution Alice Mills and Kathy Kendall (University of Southampton) Prison mental health in-reach services: care versus custody revisited Azrini Wahidin (University of Kent) No Problems – old and quiet: older offenders in prison. Chair: Alison Liebling (University of Cambridge) 115. Mentally Disordered Offenders: Comparative Approaches Lynda Crowley-Cyr (James Cook University) Understanding homelessness, mental illness and social exclusion in Australia as crimes of the state Tessa Boyd-Caine (London School of Economics) Mentally disordered offenders, victims and executive discretion Ariadne Dinou (University of Wales, Swansea) Mentally disordered offenders in the criminal justice system: the comparative study of England/Wales and Greece: some preliminary findings Chair: Peter Morrall (University of Leeds) 116. Technology and Criminal Justice Tom Cockroft (Canterbury Christchurch University College) and Rod Earle (Surrey University) Justice-led technology or technology-led justice? Future prospects for visual recording of police interviews with suspects Carole McCartney (University of Leeds) Identity databases and forensic surveillance in the ‘suspect society’ Chair: David Wall (University of Leeds)

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117. Policing and Governing Urban Places Mark Button (University of Portsmouth) Consent, commonsense and coercion: a three dimensional analysis of security officers’ use of their legal tools in private and hybrid space Roy Coleman (The University of Liverpool) Entrepreneurializing crime prevention: the reproduction of space and urban inequality Joanne Massey Patrols and control in new urban spaces

(Manchester Metropolitan University)

Chair: Ian Loader (University of Oxford)

Posters Paul Gray (Keele University) Resettling offenders for life after imprisonment Helen Sender (University of Hertfordshire) Youth, surveillance and public space Gilly Sharpe (University of Cambridge) Girls in the youth justice system

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