03830nam 22006255 450 991030004710332120251113184154.0981-10-8869-110.1007/978-981-10-8869-8(CKB)4100000002892709(MiAaPQ)EBC5358145(DE-He213)978-981-10-8869-8(PPN)225548798(EXLCZ)99410000000289270920180309d2018 u| 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierDiscretionary Police Powers to Punish A Case Study of Victoria’s Banning Notice Provisions /by Clare Farmer1st ed. 2018.Singapore :Springer Nature Singapore :Imprint: Springer,2018.1 online resource (80 pages)SpringerBriefs in Criminology,2192-8541981-10-8868-3 Includes bibliographical references.Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Preventive Justice -- Over the past decade anti-social behaviour and alcohol-related violence in and around -- Oversight and Balance in the Criminal Justice System -- Victoria’s Banning Notice Provisions -- Overview of Victoria’s Banning Notice Provisions -- Research Methodology -- Rationale Underpinning Victoria’s Banning Notice Provisions -- Scrutiny of Victoria’s Banning Notice Provisions -- Discussion -- Reference List -- Glossary of Key Terms -- Index.This book uses an Australian case study to shine a much-needed spotlight on discretionary police powers to punish, and their implications for justice and human rights. It offers a revealing analysis of the problematic rationales that secured the legislative passage of banning notice provisions through the State Parliament of Victoria, Australia in 2007, which occurred amidst similar developments in other jurisdictions across the world: in the UK, New Labour’s “tough on crime” initiative in the 1990s, responses to the post 9/11 terror threat, and more recent lockout laws in Sydney, Australia. The Victorian case study offers a range of datasets including Hansard parliamentary debates, Victoria Police data, media coverage and interviews with magistrates. This material provides critical insights into the broader consequences of discretionary police powers, including their effect upon the separation of powers, individual rights, and the steady and largely unchecked proliferation of discretionary police powers across most Australian jurisdictions. On the tenth anniversary of these first Victorian on-the-spot banning powers, this Brief provides a sound basis for subsequent criminological explorations of the effectiveness of banning in tackling issues of disorder, deterrence and punishment, and of the broader challenge of balancing individual rights and community protection.SpringerBriefs in Criminology,2192-8541CriminologySociology, UrbanHuman rightsLaw and the social sciencesCrime Control and SecurityUrban SociologyHuman RightsSocio-Legal StudiesCriminology.Sociology, Urban.Human rights.Law and the social sciences.Crime Control and Security.Urban Sociology.Human Rights.Socio-Legal Studies.363.2Farmer Clareauthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/aut995618MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910300047103321Discretionary Police Powers to Punish2281425UNINA