Browsing School of Law, Criminology and Government by Title
Now showing items 21-40 of 211
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“Cheese and Chips out of Styrofoam Containers”: An Exploration of Taste and Cultural Symbols of Appropriate Family Foodways
(2014-03-03)Taste is considered a gustatory and physiological sense. It is also something that can be developed over time. In Bourdieu’s work taste is a matter of distinction, and a means of drawing boundaries between groups about ... -
CHIEF CONSTABLES AS ‘MORAL HEROES’ AND GUARDIANS OF PUBLIC MORALITY
(routledge, 2017-08-21)This chapter examines the role of Chief Constables from the late nineteenth century to the early twentieth century in policing behaviour perceived as immoral and the initiatives they employed to enforce the law and tackle ... -
Children and Crime: In the Moment
(SAGE Publications, 2020-06-12)<jats:p> Traditional approaches to understanding and responding to children and crime are fundamentally based on ‘miniaturised’ adult models. The assumption appears to be that children are adults in the making, essentially ... -
Chile's 'Neoliberal' Retirement System? Concentration, Competition, and Economic Predation in 'Private' Pensions
(Wiley, 2015-06-10)In 1981, Chile's military dictatorship introduced a major reform of the retirement system, replacing a set of long-standing public pension arrangements with a system of privately administered, defined contribution, ... -
Chile's private pension system at 35: impact and lessons
(Taylor & Francis, 2016-03-08)This paper provides an analysis of Chile's 35 year experience with defined contribution, fully funded pensions and argues that this pension approach should not be emulated by countries seeking to reduce the state role in ... -
Climate Change Communication in the United Kingdom
(Oxford University Press, 2019-02)There is a comparably lengthy history of climate change communication research in the UK that can be traced back to the late 1980s. As is the case for media research in general, most attention has historically focused on ... -
‘Commensality’ as a theatre for witnessing change for criminalised individuals working at a resettlement scheme.
(SAGE Publications, 2018-12-01)This article draws on analysis of interview data from an exploratory case study at an independent ‘offender’ resettlement scheme in England, investigating the benefits or otherwise of commensality for criminalised individuals ... -
Commentary: "I do remember being hungry," Ophelia's i-poem
(2017-10-02)This paper makes reference to embodied foodways or the attempt to articulate the often-complex affective relationship between food and the body. It is one of five themes (family, maternal, health, embodiment and epicurean) ... -
Concealment of Birth: Time to Repeal a 200-Year-Old “Convenient Stop-Gap”?
(Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019-07) -
‘Conscientous Objectors: A Matter of Conscience or Freedom Expression?
(Devonport Guildhall, 2018-05-05)One of a series of posters for public exhibition as part of Plymouth History Month 2018 'Legal Tyranny: Conscientious Objection in the Three Towns 1853-1914' explaining how the concept of 'conscientious objection' later ... -
Constructing accounts of organisational failure: Policy, power and concealment
(SAGE Publications, 2017-11) -
Cooking with offenders to improve health and well-being
(2017-05-02) -
Creating the Virtuous Panopticon: Moral dimensions of Everyday Offending in Plymouth 1880-1910
(Liverpool University St Georges hall, 2017-09-14) -
The Credibility Gap: The Objectification of Child Victims of Sexual Abuse 1880-1980
(University of Warwick, 2018) -
Criminalising Neonaticide: Reflections on Law and Practice in England and Wales
(Springer International Publishing, 2018) -
Damned if you do and damned if you don't: the use of prime ministerial discretion and the royal prerogative
(Oxford University Press (OUP), 2020-11-30) -
Dartmoor Dialogues: An Exploration of HMP Dartmoor’s Journey Towards Becoming an Integrated Prison Underpinned by Restorative Practices
(University of PlymouthPlymouth, 2020-06-30)