Joanna Shapland
- Auteur
Joanna Shapland is hoogleraar strafrecht aan de Universiteit van Sheffield en hoofd van het Centre for Criminological Research aan dezelfde universiteit.
Joanna Shapland is hoogleraar strafrecht aan de Universiteit van Sheffield en hoofd van het Centre for Criminological Research aan dezelfde universiteit.
Axel Groenemeyer
€ 45,00
Boeken van Joanna Shapland
Antoinette Verhage
Tom Vander Beken
Christophe Vandeviver
Jacques de Maillard
Fabien Jobard
Joanna Shapland
Making Strategic Choices in Social Science Research
This edited publication is the 7th volume of the GERN Research Paper Series stemming from the annual doctoral summer school that took place in Ghent (Belgium) in 2022.
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Alison Liebling
Joanna Shapland
Richard Sparks
Justice Tankebe
Crime, Justice, and Social Order
To honour Professor Anthony Edward Bottoms, leading criminologists and penal scholars have been asked to contribute original essays on the wide range of areas in which he has written.
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Gorazd Meško
Joanna Shapland
Axel Groenemeyer
Carole Gayet-Viaud
Challenges of Comparative Criminological Research
This edited publication is the sixth volume of the GERN Research Paper Series stemming from the annual doctoral summer school that took place in Ljubljana (Slovenia) in 2018.
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Axel Groenemeyer
Carole Gayet-Viaud
Gorazd Meško
Paul Ponsaers
Joanna Shapland
Deviance and Crime – Social Control, Criminal Justice, and Criminology in Europe
This is the fifth volume stemming from the annual doctoral conferences organized by the GERN in September 2016 in Dortmund, Germany.
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Joanna Shapland
Justice, Community and Civil Society
Over the last decade there has arisen considerable disquiet about the relationship between criminal justice and its publics. This has been expressed in a variety of different ways, ranging from a concern that state criminal justice has moved too far away from the concerns of ordinary people (become too distant, too out of touch, insufficiently reflective of different groups in society) to the belief that the police have been attending to the wrong priorities, that the state has failed to reduce crime, that people still feel a general sense of insecurity.
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