All Stories

  1. Innovating during the pandemic? Policing, domestic abuse and multi-agency risk assessment conferencing (MARACs)
  2. Lone Wolf Terrorism Through a Gendered Lens: Men Turning Violent or Violent Men Behaving Violently?
  3. Real Lives and Lost Lives: Making Sense of ‘Locked in’ Responses to Intimate Partner Homicide
  4. Reflections on community safety: the ongoing precarity of women’s lives
  5. ‘Seeing’ gender, war and terror
  6. Criminology, Gender and Risk: The Dilemmas of Northern Theorising for Southern Responses to Intimate Partner Violence
  7. Victim stories and victim policy: Is there a case for a narrative victimology?
  8. Editorial introduction
  9. Is more law the answer? Seeking justice for victims of intimate partner violence through the reform of legal categories
  10. Criminology, gender and security in the Australian context: Making women’s lives matter
  11. Assembling and deconstructing radicalisation in PREVENT: A case of policy-based evidence making?
  12. The efficacy of Clare’s Law in domestic violence law reform in England and Wales
  13. Not knowing, emancipatory catastrophism and metamorphosis: Embracing the spirit of Ulrich Beck
  14. Liquid Criminology
  15. Fractured Lives, Splintered Knowledge: Making Criminological Sense of the January, 2015 Terrorist Attacks in Paris
  16. Homicide, Gender and Responsibility
  17. Counterterrorism and the Reconstruction of (In)Security: Divisions, Dualisms, Duplicities
  18. The Metamorphosis of the Victim of Crime: From Crime to Culture and the Implications for Justice
  19. Whither Criminology: Its Global Futures?
  20. Nils Christie: On the periphery but in the centre
  21. Victims
  22. “When you see the lipstick kisses …” - military repatriation, public mourning and the politics of respect
  23. Criminology and War
  24. Jock Young, Left Realism and Critical Victimology
  25. Thinking Differently about ‘False Allegations’ in Cases of Rape: The Search for Truth
  26. Understanding the Conceptual Lineage and Limitations of Resilience in Contemporary Social Policy
  27. A Sociological Analysis of Military Resilience
  28. Introduction
  29. Sexual violence against women
  30. Victimology (Routledge Revivals)
  31. Witnessing the pain of suffering: Exploring the relationship between media representations, public understandings and policy responses to filicide-suicide
  32. Searching for Resilience
  33. Controversies in Policy Research
  34. ’Victims’ and European Policy Initiatives: Symbolism or Meaningful Progress?
  35. The soldier, human rights and the military covenant: a permissible state of exception?
  36. Response 2: Can the Big Society listen to gendered voices?
  37. Decentralizing risk: The role of the voluntary and community sector in the management of offenders
  38. ‘Why Should We Have to Prove We’re Alright?’: Counter-terrorism, Risk and Partial Securities
  39. Genocide and the dynamics of victimization: Some observations on Armenia
  40. Who is the victim of crime? Paying homage to the work of Richard Quinney
  41. New Directions in Criminological Theory
  42. Courting Compassion: Victims, Policy, and the Question of Justice
  43. Witnessing Wootton Bassett: An Exploration in Cultural Victimology
  44. The Soldier as Victim: Peering through the Looking Glass
  45. Reframing criminal victimization: Finding a place for vulnerability and resilience
  46. Review Symposium: The politics of risk, the risk of politics
  47. Beyond risk theory: Experiential knowledge and ‘knowing otherwise’
  48. Pre-crime, regulation, and counter-terrorism: interrogating anticipatory risk
  49. Agency, reflexivity and risk: cosmopolitan, neurotic or prudential citizen?
  50. 'I'm a Muslim, but I'm not a Terrorist': Victimization, Risky Identities and the Performance of Safety
  51. Terrorism, Risk and International Security: The Perils of Asking 'What If?'
  52. What is to be Done About Violence Against Women?: Gender, Violence, Cosmopolitanism and the Law
  53. Communicating the terrorist risk: Harnessing a culture of fear?
  54. Criminology and Terrorism
  55. Researching Restorative Justice: Politics, Policy and Process
  56. Gender, Crime and Criminal Justice
  57. The protective society? Seeking safety in an insecure world
  58. Gender and Crime: a red herring?
  59. Teaching the American Civil Rights Movement
  60. Fearful Communities?
  61. Reflections on ‘New Labour’ or ‘Back to the Future’?
  62. Some Questions For and About Community Safety Partnerships and Crime
  63. Victims' Needs and the Availability of Services: A Comparison of Burglary Victims in Poland, Hungary, and England
  64. Acknowledging victims needs and rights
  65. Zero Tolerance or Community Tolerance? Police and Community Talk about Crime in High-Crime Areas
  66. Crime and Community: Fear or Trust?
  67. “No more excuses!”: Young people, victims and making amends
  68. Excavating the Fear of Crime:
  69. Is a victim a victim a victim?
  70. RISK AND CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION: A Modernist Dilemma?
  71. The Impact of Burglary: A Tale of Two Cities
  72. Criminalising Women?
  73. Jack and Jill join up at sun hill; Public images of police officers
  74. REPARATION