| Untangling the concept of coercive control: Theorizing domestic violent crime |
12 |
| Legal systems abuse and coercive control |
10 |
| The changing shape of youth justice: Models of practice |
10 |
| Police officers, mental (ill-)health and spoiled identity |
7 |
| Coercive control: To criminalize or not to criminalize? |
7 |
| Is more law the answer? Seeking justice for victims of intimate partner violence through the reform of legal categories |
7 |
| Aligning policy and law? The creation of a domestic abuse offence incorporating coercive control |
6 |
| Policing roulette: Sex workers' perception of encounters with police officers in the indoor and outdoor sector in England |
6 |
| The social psychological processes of 'procedural justice': Concepts, critiques and opportunities |
6 |
| From severe to routine labour exploitation: The case of migrant workers in the UK food industry |
5 |
| The stop and search of minors: A vital police tool'? |
5 |
| Practitioner (mis)understandings of coercive control in England and Wales |
4 |
| The relationship between fear of crime and risk perception across Europe |
4 |
| Policing as a performing art? The contradictory nature of contemporary police performance management |
4 |
| The steady proliferation of Australia's discretionary police-imposed patron banning powers: An unsubstantiated cycle of assertion and presumption |
4 |
| Lives and spaces: Photovoice and offender supervision in Ireland and England |
4 |
| Stories as property: Narrative ownership as a key concept in victims' experiences with criminal justice |
4 |
| The core conditions of peer mentoring |
3 |
| Young people's conceptions of trust and confidence in the crime control system: Differences between public and private policing |
3 |
| Intersectional needs and reentry: Re-conceptualizing 'multiple and complex needs' post-release |
3 |
| 'Kidulthood': Ethnography, juvenile prison violence and the transition from 'boys' to 'men' |
3 |
| Historical criminology and the explanatory power of the past |
3 |
| Implementing a perpetrator-focused partnership approach to tackling domestic abuse: The opportunities and challenges of criminal justice localism |
3 |
| Is restorative justice conferencing appropriate for youth offenders? |
3 |
| Human rights and youth justice reform in England and Wales: A systemic analysis |
3 |
| Empowering the police to fight terrorism in Israel |
3 |
| Keeping up, and keeping on: Risk, acceleration and the law-abiding driving offender |
3 |
| Non-custodial deaths: Missing, ignored or unimportant? |
3 |
| Direct harms and social consequences: An analysis of the impact of maternal imprisonment on dependent children in England and Wales |
3 |
| Delivering McJustice? The probation factory at the Magistrates' court |
2 |
| The impact of the Great Recession on the Irish drug market |
2 |
| Fiction, war and criminology |
2 |
| Responding to hate crime: Escalating problems, continued failings |
2 |
| Searching prison cells and prisoner bodies: Redacting carceral power and glimpsing gendered resistance in women's prisons |
2 |
| Status, stigma and stereotype: How drug takers and drug suppliers avoid negative labelling by virtue of their 'conventional' and 'law-abiding' lives |
2 |
| Distinctly divergent or hanging onto English coat-tails? Drug policy in post-devolution Wales |
2 |
| Women offenders: Promoting a holistic approach and continuity of care across criminal justice and health interventions |
2 |
| History, periodization and the character of contemporary crime control |
1 |
| Historical context and the criminological imagination: Towards a three-dimensional criminology |
1 |
| A propensity score analysis of a community resettlement programme for women prisoners |
1 |
| Why sentence? Comparing the views of jurors, judges and the legislature on the purposes of sentencing in Victoria, Australia |
1 |
| Hidden voices: Practitioner perspectives on the early histories of probation in Ireland |
1 |
| Narrative expressivism: A criminological approach to the expressive function of international criminal justice |
1 |
| Doing research with police elites in Ghana |
1 |
| Bridging the gap between research and frontline youth justice practice |
1 |
| 'Seeing' gender, war and terror |
1 |
| Traces of violence: Representing the atrocities of war |
1 |
| The practicalities of English and Welsh rape trials: Observations and avenues for improvement |
1 |
| The social origins of gender differences in anticipated feelings of guilt and shame following delinquency |
1 |
| Expert evidence on coercive control in support of self-defence: The trial of Teresa Craig |
1 |