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Criminal justice, social inequalities and social justice in Scotland. Paper for Seminar at The Open University in Scotland, 10 February 2011 Hazel Croall.

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Presentation on theme: "Criminal justice, social inequalities and social justice in Scotland. Paper for Seminar at The Open University in Scotland, 10 February 2011 Hazel Croall."— Presentation transcript:

1 Criminal justice, social inequalities and social justice in Scotland. Paper for Seminar at The Open University in Scotland, 10 February 2011 Hazel Croall (Professor Emerita, Glasgow Caledonian University).

2 Focus on Scotland: The potential of a ‘tartan’ lens? The neglect of Scotland (and other jurisdictions) in ‘Anglocentric’ criminology for example: The ‘British’ Crime Survey; difficulties of meaningful comparisons. Criminology Texts Theoretical discussions/ analysis: for example  discussions of juvenile gangs (from ‘no gangs in Britain’ to focus on England )  race, ethnicity and crime (neglects different Scottish context). Extends beyond crime to other relevant areas: for example, poverty, employment, deprivation, race and ethnicity.

3 Focus on Scotland: The potential of a ‘tartan’ lens? Why important? Misleading for students; Affects discussions on criminal justice Neglects opportunities for comparative analysis

4 Relationships between Crime and Inequalities: crime deprivation Focus (of book) on interrelationships between crime and social inequalities of class, race, ethnicity, gender, age and others. Popular association between crime and social and economic deprivation; dangerous people/ dangerous places (Law et al 2010). Scottish popular culture for example, films (Trainspotting, NEDS); novels – Tartan Noir; autobiographies; ‘true crime’; journalism. Politics: the ‘underclass’; ‘Shettleston man’.

5 Relationships between Crime and Inequalities Reflected in research: relationships between imprisonment and social exclusion (Houchin 2005); high levels of victimisation, repeat victimisation and fears of crime among ‘most deprived’ (Mooney et al 2010); Links between serious and persistent youth offending with indices of deprivation. But note gaps: information often quantitative, contrasts ‘most’ and ‘least’ deprived; ‘risk factors’ (being male; low income); Know little about interrelationships between socio economic and other inequalities as they relate to crime and victimisation –limited information about, for example, race and ethnicity (Croall and Frondigoun 2010).

6 Relationships between Crime and Inequalities Need more qualitative research –focus on ‘lived realities’ Need to recognise relationship between crime and Widening gaps between rich and poor culture -Young (2007) ‘cultural inclusion’ coupled with ‘structural exclusion’. Particularly relevant in Scotland: Mooney and Wright (2009) suggest greater levels of polarisation. Need to recognise the role of criminal justice: To what extent are ‘usual suspects’ (McAra and McVie 2005; 2010) more likely to be targeted? An emergent ‘parallel’ justice system (Munro and McNeill 2010)?

7 Crimes of the less deprived and corporations Crimes of ‘greed’ as opposed to ‘need’ Include: ‘Everyday crimes’ of middle classes (tax evasion; insurance fraud) Professional frauds (doctors, accountants, lawyers etc.- generally dealt with by private justice) Bankers and serious financial frauds Environmental crimes: wildlife crime; ‘black’ fish. Corporate crime (Safety crimes; consumer crime; environmental crime).

8 Crimes of the less deprived and corporations Scottish Examples (Ross and Croall 2010; Walters 2010) Transco; Piper Alpha; Stockline; Weir’s (£14 million penalty for sanctions busting); Nuclear and Defence Industries Different form of criminalisation and regulation Illustrates relationships between criminal and social justice.

9 Prospects for criminal justice: need to focus on: More ‘qualitative’ research (to provide a better ‘evidence base’ for policy) More attention to the comparative dimension within and beyond UK – other small jurisdictions Tackling wider inequalities A fairer criminal justice system Resisting popular punitivism

10 Prospects for criminal justice: some Positive indicators Consistent indications of falling rates of many kinds of crime (youth disorder, property crime, homicide, violent crime, knife crime) Increase in research (SIPR; SCCJR) Some willingness to consider heavier punishments/ more prosecution of corporations Some move away from overly punitive policies (presumption against short prison sentences; community options; initiatives with young people)

11 Prospects for criminal justice: Threats Economic recession and resource constraints Will some forms of crime increase? Reduction in resources for voluntary and public sector (impact on, for example, community payback; policing; regulation of environmental and safety crimes and also research). Persistence of popular punitivism: for example, resistance to shorter prison sentences by main opposition parties; tenor of debates about criminal justice policy.


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