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This book arises from a research project funded in Australia by the Criminology Research Council. The topic, bail reform, has attracted attention from criminologists and law reformers over many years. In the USA, a reform movement has argued that risk analysis and pre-trial services should replace the bail bond system (the state of California may introduce this system in 2020). In the United Kingdom, Europe and Australia, there have been concerns about tough bail laws that have contributed to a rise in imprisonment rates. The approach in this book is distinctive. The inter-disciplinary authors include criminologists, an academic lawyer and a forensic psychologist together with qualitative researchers with backgrounds in sociology and anthropology. The book advances a policy argument through presenting descriptive statistics, interviews with practitioners and detailed accounts of bail applications and their outcomes. There is discussion of methodological issues throughout the book, including the challenges of obtaining data from the courts.
Examines the provision of pretrial services to reduce the imprisoned population Broadens the literature on bail, which tends to be US-focussed, by examining bail in Australia Comes from a well-respected and inter-disciplinary set of authors in law, psychology, sociology and anthropology Adopts a mixed-methods approach, combining qualitative interviews, courtroom observations and quantitative analysis
Auteur
Max Travers is Senior Lecturer in the School of Social Sciences, University of Tasmania, Australia.
Rick Sarre is Emeritus Professor of Law and Criminal Justice in the School of Law, University of South Australia, Australia.
Isabelle Bartkowiak-Theron is Senior Lecturer and Discipline Coordinator Police Studies in the School of Social Sciences, University of Tasmania, Australia.
Emma Colvin is Lecturer in the Centre for Law and Justice, Charles Sturt University, Australia.
Christine Bond is Senior Lecturer in the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice and Griffith Criminology Institute, Griffith University, Australia.
Andrew Day is Enterprise Professor, University of Melbourne, Australia
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