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El. knyga: Looking for Laura

  • Formatas: 224 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 22-Jun-2011
  • Leidėjas: Waterside Press
  • ISBN-13: 9781908162007
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 224 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 22-Jun-2011
  • Leidėjas: Waterside Press
  • ISBN-13: 9781908162007
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David Wilson is one of the UK's best-known and most innovative criminologists. This thought-provoking book stems from the author's parallel experiences in the public eye - as a reporter for Sky News and contributor to BBC, ITV and both national and local newspapers and magazines, especially in relation to high profile cases and fast-moving events in the field of crime and punishment. 'Looking for Laura' provides a window through which to appreciate the media pressures that this can create even for a professor in this field and former prison governor with considerable experience of working with offenders who hit the headlines. The book also looks at the way in which crime is packaged and presented for consumption by a news-hungry public. By considering a range of media situations in which the author has been involved, it provides an absorbing context within which to understand the still relatively new field of public criminology. It has a Foreword by the award-winning investigative journalist Donal MacIntyre

Recenzijos

'This significant contribution to criminological studies offers a text where both scholar and common reader can understand the issues regarding crime reporting and society... while the term "public criminology" has recently gained popularity, it can convincingly be argued that Wilson was a public criminologist before it was in vogue': Howard Journal of Criminal Justice. 'Full of observations and insights that reward careful reading, but more than a source of reflection, it is also an attempt to inspire, incite and provoke criminologists into action': Prison Service Journal 'A provocative, readable and interesting text that straddles several areas of criminological theory and specialism, but strikes first and foremost as a stimulating read and a book which makes you think more about public criminology. What it should be and whether and how it should be undertaken. For that reason it should be one of those at the forefront of debate on academic criminology's function and purpose and I hope it enjoys a sufficient readership and acts to re-invigorate and stimulate future debates about the role and function of "public criminology"': Probation Journal 'An excellent addition for those students studying subjects with a focus on cultural criminology. An interesting and engrossing text and an excellent addition for the discipline': Paul Taylor, University of Chester 'An inspiring and intelligent read': Donal MacIntyre (from the Foreword). As featured on the BBC Radio 2 Jeremy Vine Show.

About the author viii
Acknowledgements ix
Foreword xi
Introduction xiii
Public Criminology! xiii
1 Children, the Internet and the Crime Figures
25(20)
Academics on the Telly
31(3)
Joining Us Live
34(2)
Damned Lies
36(3)
Laura, Shannon and "Pure Evil"
39(4)
But What Now?
43(2)
2 Serial Killer Thrillers
45(22)
Deoxyribonucleic Acid
47(2)
Forensic Science and Cross-Examination
49(3)
"No Comment"
52(1)
Some Further Thoughts on Serial Killers
53(3)
Labelling Serial Killers
56(4)
Catching Serial Killers
60(2)
"Breaking News" in Ipswich
62(5)
3 The Chief Constable---The Tale of a Criminal Justice Professional
67(20)
Michael Todd QPM
68(4)
Cop Culture
72(3)
Alison Halford, a Swimming Pool and Mike Todd
75(4)
Reform: A New Force?
79(8)
4 Celebrity Cons---Bronson, Banged Up and Bad Girls
87(22)
Prison Film---Prison Reform?
91(6)
Banged Up
97(5)
"David Blunkett's Banged Up is a Sham"
102(4)
The Royal Television Society Awards
106(3)
5 Serial Killers---Now You See Them, Now You Don't
109(22)
The Academy and the Serial Killer
110(4)
Trevor Joseph Hardy
114(4)
Newsworthy?
118(5)
So, Which Serial Killer Becomes the Celebrity?
123(3)
The Serial Killer in the Academy
126(5)
6 The Righteous Slaughter of Some Shootings
131(18)
And then Another One
136(3)
A Paranoid Narcissist with a Gun
139(3)
Similarities and Differences
142(5)
Big Bang Lessons?
147(2)
7 The Offender Profiler
149(18)
Profiling the Profiler: His Working Methods
151(2)
Originating Offender Profiles
153(2)
Talking with Serial Killers
155(3)
Killers Who Will Not Talk
158(1)
Organized and Disorganized
159(2)
Bind, Torture and Kill
161(2)
At the End of it All
163(4)
8 Explaining "Ordinary" Murder and Murder Investigations
167(26)
Defining Murder
168(1)
How Much Murder?
169(2)
Theories and Explanations
171(3)
Psychoanalytical Psychology
174(2)
Evolutionary Psychology
176(2)
Social Learning and Cognitive Psychology
178(2)
Police-Media Relations During a Murder Investigation
180(2)
Servicing Needs at Arm's Length
182(8)
Keeping the Media Onside in a Murder Investigation
190(3)
Postscript
193(3)
Still Looking for Laura?
193(3)
A Guide to Further Reading and Other References
196(9)
Introduction
196(9)
Chapter 1
196(1)
Chapter 2
197(1)
Chapter 3
198(1)
Chapter 4
199(1)
Chapter 5
199(2)
Chapter 6
201(1)
Chapter 7
202(1)
Chapter 8
203(2)
Index 205
David Wilson is Professor of Criminology at the Centre for Criminal Justice Policy and Research at the University of Central England in Birmingham. A former prison governor, he is editor of the Howard Journal and a well-known author, broadcaster and presenter for TV and radio, including for the BBC, C4 and Sky Television. He has written four earlier books for Waterside Press: The Longest Injustice: The Strange Story of Alex Alexandrowicz (with the latter) (1999), Prison(er) Education: Stories of Change and Transformation (with Ann Reuss) (2000), Images of Incarceration: Representations of Prison in Film and Television Drama (with Sean O'Sullivan) (2004), and Serial Killers: Hunting Britons and Their Victims 1960-2006 (2007). Donal MacIntyre is an investigative journalist, television presenter and director.