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Date: November 22, 2024 Fri
Time: 11:34 am
Time: 11:34 am
Results for crime policies
2 results foundAuthor: Cruz, Jose Miguel Title: Should Authorities Respect the Law When Fighting Crime? Summary: Ths study examines public support for the authorities’ respect for the law when fighting criminal violence. Using the 2008 round of the Americas-Barometer, 36,021 respondents from twenty-two countries in the Americas were asked whether authorities should always obey the law or, instead, if they can disregard the law in order to catch criminals. Details: Nashville, TN: Vanderbilt University, Latin American Public Opinion Project, 2009. 8p. Source: Internet Resource; Accessed August 14, 2010 at: http://sitemason.vanderbilt.edu/files/kroGfC/I0819%20Should%20Authorities%20Respect%20the%20Law%20When%20Fighting%20Crime%20English.pdf; AmericasBarometer Insights: 2009 (No. 19) Year: 2009 Country: Central America URL: http://sitemason.vanderbilt.edu/files/kroGfC/I0819%20Should%20Authorities%20Respect%20the%20Law%20When%20Fighting%20Crime%20English.pdf; AmericasBarometer Insights: 2009 (No. 19) Shelf Number: 119605 Keywords: Crime PoliciesPublic Opinion (Latin America)Rule of LawViolent Crime |
Author: Farrall, Stephen Title: Using Ideas Derived from Historical Institutionalism to Illuminate the Long-term Impacts on Crime of 'Thatcherite' Social and Economic Policies Summary: In this working paper, we outline our thinking on a very large and complex undertaking; namely the assessment of the ways in which the Thatcher governments of the 1980s may have had quite unintended consequences on crime via some of the policies which they set about pursuing for quite separate reasons, but which, nevertheless contributed to amongst other things, the upswing in crime in the 1980s. Our thinking is not heavily informed by theories commonly examined by criminologists; instead our thinking about both the causal antecedents of these governments and their approach to re-engineering society, and the causal antecedents of crime are informed by thinking inspired by historical institutionalist scholars writing within political science, and sociological and economic theories of crime causation. We outline historical institutionalism and identify the ways in which it may be of use to ourselves. Details: Sheffield, UK: University of Sheffield, 2014. 44p. Source: Internet Resource: Working Paper. ESRC Long-term Crime Trends, 1 (1): Accessed February 12, 2015 at: http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/77483/1/Working%20Paper%201%20%28Historical%20Institutionalism%29.pdf Year: 2014 Country: United Kingdom URL: http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/77483/1/Working%20Paper%201%20%28Historical%20Institutionalism%29.pdf Shelf Number: 134602 Keywords: Crime PoliciesCrime Trends (U.K.)Criminal Justice Policy |