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Book
The prisoners' dilemma : political economy and punishment in contemprary democracies
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ISBN: 9780521728294 9780521899475 0521899478 0521728290 9780511819247 1107188113 9786611751210 0511414544 0511415222 0511412002 0511819242 1281751219 0511412932 0511413858 9780511415227 9781107188112 9781281751218 6611751211 9780511414541 9780511412936 9780511412004 9780511413858 Year: 2008 Volume: 2007 Publisher: Cambridge: Cambridge university press,

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Abstract

Over the last two decades, and in the wake of increases in recorded crime and other social changes, British criminal justice policy has become increasingly politicised as an index of governments' competence. New and worrying developments, such as the inexorable rise of the US prison population and the rising force of penal severity, seem unstoppable in the face of popular anxiety about crime. But is this inevitable? Nicola Lacey argues that harsh 'penal populism' is not the inevitable fate of all contemporary democracies. Notwithstanding a degree of convergence, globalisation has left many of the key institutional differences between national systems intact, and these help to explain the striking differences in the capacity for penal tolerance in otherwise relatively similar societies. Only by understanding the institutional preconditions for a tolerant criminal justice system can we think clearly about the possible options for reform within particular systems.

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