Now available at Canadian Journal of Criminology and Criminal Justice ONLINE

 

Canadian Journal of Criminology and Criminal Justice/La Revue canadienne de criminologie et de justice pénale Volume 52, Number 2 / April 2010 of is now available at http://utpjournals.metapress.com/content/n1ux4465443t/.

 

This issue contains:

 

Policing Proliferation: On Militarization and Atomic Energy Canada Limited's Nuclear Response Forces

Kevin Walby, Jeff Monaghan

 

Abstract: This paper describes the militarization of security and police forces occurring in Canada vis-à-vis regulation of the nuclear industry. Based on analysis of access to information requests, we investigate the operations of Nuclear Response Forces (NRFs) on nuclear sites in Canada, including the structural features of these NRFs, and their connections to local as well as national security and policing agencies. Our research explores the post–11 September 2001 impact of “design basis threat” assessment and counterterrorism policy on policing operations. Design basis threat assessment organizes security and policing practices according to adversarial models of military operation. We argue that the literature concerning militarization of policing must be extended to account for how the coordination of private and public security agencies as well as intelligence agencies at critical infrastructure sites facilitates the distribution of military technology and strategy across numerous scales of policing. Commenting on how militarization of security vis-à-vis nuclear proliferation in Canada is affecting some rural police forces, we contend that the design basis threat model of counterterrorism is transforming the strategy and operations of some local police forces working in jurisdictions near nuclear sites.

 http://utpjournals.metapress.com/content/2428488572076ug5/?p=a53b8aa41d3a408294ffbbbd780db871&pi=0

 

Nœuds ou champs ? Analyse de l'expertise internationale sur la criminalité transnationale organisée et le terrorisme

Amandine Scherrer, Benoît Dupont

 

Abstract: In the particular context of the post–Cold War era, when military threat reconstructed itself in discourses around more diffuse phenomena like organised transnational crime and terrorism, civil servants from state administrations were called upon to participate in more or less formal meetings within the framework of regional and/or international institutions. These meetings intensified during the 1990s, which helped reinforce or create networks of actors at an international level. Analysis of these work groups, also called “expert groups”, presents a certain number of empirical and epistemological difficulties that are explored in this article. The objective is to shed light on one of these expert groups in particular and, using empirical data that are often difficult to collect, assess the pertinence of two theoretical approaches developed in the social sciences: field theory and nodal governance.

http://utpjournals.metapress.com/content/2k9x55017510050h/?p=a53b8aa41d3a408294ffbbbd780db871&pi=1

 

Lay Perceptions of Child Pornography Offenders

Anita Lam, Jennifer Mitchell, Michael C. Seto

 

Abstract : The present study examined how age and gender of the depicted minor (Study 1) and offender (Study 2) influenced university students' perceptions of the offence of possession of child pornography. A total of 492 participants rated perceived offence severity, appropriate sentence, probability of child pornography reoffence, probability of past and future sexual contact with a minor, and probability that the offender is a pedophile. In Study 1, the possession offence was rated as more severe if the depicted minor was younger, irrespective of the minor's gender. In Study 2, age and gender of the offender had no effect on perceptions of offence severity, but male offenders were considered to be at higher risk for committing a future child pornography offence. In both studies, participants rated the offence as more severe if they believed the offender was likely a pedophile. The study findings indicate a divergence between lay perceptions and the empirical evidence relating to child pornography offenders. We discuss potential implications on public policy, law, and research. http://utpjournals.metapress.com/content/252r3k356gg15mk8/?p=a53b8aa41d3a408294ffbbbd780db871&pi=2

 

 

Bad Dates and Street Hassles: Violence in the Winnipeg Street Sex Trade

Elizabeth Comack, Maya Seshia

 

Abstract: Violence has become an all too regular feature of the street sex trade, yet we know very little about the nature of this violence and even less about its perpetrators. In order to map out the social characteristics of the perpetrators, the location where these events are most likely to occur, the forms of the violence that take place, and the presence of weapons, this study draws on data gleaned from reports of “bad dates” and “street hassles” published in two newsletters distributed by inner-city agencies in Winnipeg. The findings support the view that working in the street sex trade is a job that carries considerable risk. While violence against street sex trade workers is part of the continuum of violence against women, the social circumstances in which they work and the “discourse of disposal” that prevails combine to make street sex trade workers even more susceptible to this violence.

 http://utpjournals.metapress.com/content/245h428420020005/?p=a53b8aa41d3a408294ffbbbd780db871&pi=3

 

Reforming Investigative Interviewing in Canada

Brent Snook, Joseph Eastwood, Michael Stinson, et al.

 

Abstract: Investigative interviewing practices in Canada require substantive reform. Adult witness and victim interview training for Canadian police officers is often cursory, and suspect interview training is limited to the much-maligned Reid technique. This state of affairs is troublesome because interviewers may not be maximizing the quality and quantity of information that can be retrieved from interviewees. An inquisitorial interviewing method, known as PEACE, that is ethical and grounded in scientific research is outlined. Investigative interviewing reform can best be achieved through the implementation of a standardized national model that is based on PEACE and through increased practitioner–academic partnerships.

 http://utpjournals.metapress.com/content/27261q5ht077wpp8/?p=a53b8aa41d3a408294ffbbbd780db871&pi=4

 

Book Reviews / Recensions de livres (April/avril 2010)

http://utpjournals.metapress.com/content/2u225r06726xr250/?p=a53b8aa41d3a408294ffbbbd780db871&pi=5

 


 

Canadian Journal of Criminology and Criminal Justice

Now in its 52nd year of publication, the Canadian Journal of Criminology and Criminal Justice – one of the most established journals of criminology in the world – is now available ONLINE.

 

CJCCJ, led by an editorial team selected from the criminology and criminal justice research communities in Canada and abroad, is the inter-disciplinary forum for original contributions and discussion in the field of criminology and criminal justice. Its focus is on the theoretical and scientific aspects of the study of crime and the practical problems of law enforcement, administration of justice and the treatment of offenders.

 

This highly respected scientific publication of the Canadian Criminal Justice Association features in-depth articles based on research and experimentation and appeals to justice administrators, researchers and practitioners, academics, and anyone wishing to keep abreast of recent criminological findings and opinions.

 

The CJCCJ frequently publishes special thematic issues. Recent issues have explored topics such as the Youth Criminal Justice Act, wrongful convictions, criminology research in Canada, and punishment and restorative justice. Forthcoming issues of interest are Privacy and Police Powers (available summer 2008) and Car Theft (available late 2008).

 

Canadian Journal of Criminology and Criminal Justice

University of Toronto Press — Journals Division
5201
Dufferin St., Toronto, ON, Canada M3H 5T8
Tel: (416) 667-7810 Fax: (416) 667-7881
Fax Toll Free in
North America 1-800-221-9985
email:
[log in to unmask]

www.utpjournals.com/cjccj/cjccj.html

utpjournals.metapress.com

 

We’re on Facebook! visit us at

www.facebook.com/pages/Journals-University-of-Toronto-Press/148645031723

 

posted by T Hawkins, UTP Journals