Abstract

We have received three new penology titles this issue: The Prisoner, edited by Ben Crewe and Jamie Bennett (Routledge); Corrections: A Critical Approach, by Michael Welch (Routledge, 3rd edition); and Enforcing the Convict Code: Violence and Prison Culture, by Rebecca Trammell (Lynne Rienner)
We have two new global policing titles: the Routledge Handbook of Transnational Organized Crime, edited by Felia Allum and Stan Gilmour; and Global Policing, by Ben Bowling and James Sheptycki (Sage).
Globalization and Borders: Death at the Frontier, by Leanne Weber and Sharon Pickering (Palgrave Macmillan), examines the role of border controls in producing fatal risk.
Ashgate have published an extensive collection of Robert Reiner’s far-ranging work on policing: Policing, Popular Culture and Political Economy. The specific issue of police reform is addressed in Police Reform from the Bottom Up: Officers and their Unions as Agents of Change, edited by Monique Marks and David Sklansky (Routledge).
Different dimensions of international criminal law are covered in Exploring the Boundaries of International Criminal Justice, edited by Ralph Henham and Mark Findlay; and American Memories: Atrocities and the Law, by Joachim J Savelsberg and Ryan D King (Russell Sage Foundation).
We have two new readers: Introduction to Criminological Thought, by Trevor Bradley Reece Walters (Pearson, 2nd edition); and Leah E Daigle, Victimology: A Text/Reader (Sage).
Other titles to arrive include: Sex, Crime and Morality, by Sharon Hayes and Belinda Carpenter with Angela Dwyer (Routledge); Race and Justice: Wrongful Convictions of African American Men, by Marvin D Free Jnr and Mitch Ruesink (Lynne Rienner); and White-Collar Crime: Accounts of Offending Behaviour, by Janice Goldstraw-White (Palgrave Macmillan).
All queries and suggestions regarding reviews should be directed to the Reviews Editor, Michael Grewcock, Faculty of Law, University of New South Wales:
