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| New
Releases in the Series |

Conflict
of Interest in Policing:
Problems, Practices, and Principles
by Cindy Davids
Conflict
of interest allegations have become a prominent part of the
landscape of political and public sector ethics in Australia
and overseas. The arena of policing has not been immune from
this problem. This book is based on unique and unfettered
access to ten years of internal investigation files held by
Victoria Police. Through detailed analysis of actual complaint
cases it gives the reader a comprehensive map by which to
chart the particular kinds of interests involved, the nature
of conflicts with official police duties, and the particular
contexts from which conflicts of interest emerge. The book
examines conflicts of interest across the private and public
realm of the everyday lives of police officers. The author
outlines how the problem of conflict of interest is an important
aspect of police ethics, arguing that recognition of, and
accountability for, conflict of interest may be a significant
element in preventing upstream police misconduct and corruption.
The book seeks to provide a conceptual and practical understanding
of how integrity and trust must be integrated into the profession
of policing through processes of active responsibility, rather
than more traditional passive obedience to prescriptive rules.
"Dr
Davids provides useful and rigorous definitions of the wide
range of conflicts of interest that lie in wait to ethically
undo the unaware or ignorant police officer in the ordinary
course of his or her public duties. She explores in great
and useful detail the dimensions of the problem, the different
types of cases, and, importantly, how through the complaints
system those that are reported are internally investigated
and resolved. ... This book will make a significant contribution
to the education of future generations of police officers.
I commend it to you." - Christine Nixon, APM, Chief
Commissioner, Victoria Police
Cindy
Davids' research "provides insights into complaints
and complaints procedures which are unique in the policing
literature. She organises, analyses and theorises her data
with skill, drawing conclusions which are of interest not
just to policing scholars, but to those more generally concerned
with conflicts of interest in the broader fields of ethics
and regulation." - Professor David Dixon, Dean,
University of New South Wales Law Faculty
Institute
of Criminology Series No 26 2008
Recommended Retail Price $49.95
ISBN 9780975196762
Order from the Institute or Federation
Press

Criminal
Discovery:
From Truth to Proof and Back Again
by Cosmas Moisidis
Criminal
discovery is the essence of the criminal pre-trial process.
Critical stages in the discovery process include police interrogations,
committal hearings and pre-trial disclosure regimes. Crucial
and controversial issues in this debate are the scope of the
right to silence and the privilege against self-incrimination.
These issues in turn have resulted in heated debates between
rival stakeholders such as police, prosecutors, defence lawyers
and victims’ groups. Instead of viewing the matter as
a mere balancing exercise between competing interest groups,
the book puts forward a blueprint for the future which is
informed by historical, jurisprudential and practical considerations.
Criminal
Discovery: From Truth to Proof and Back Again is
"creative, provocative and most impressive in its
mastery of legal history, theory and common law experience.
It puts a persuasive case for substantial reform of one of
the most contentious areas of criminal justice over the centuries,
an area in which there is usually much more heat than light.
He has shone a powerful torch on it, showing a way forward."
- Stephen Odgers SC
"This
well-researched and equally well-written treatise is bound
to command attention and respect in what now seems to be the
eternal debate about a right to silence and compulsion to
disclose. The book should not just be regarded as informative
but also essential reading for those who seek to engage in
that debate." - The Honourable Ian Callinan AC,
QC, Justice of the High Court of Australia 1998-2007
Institute
of Criminology Series No 27 2008
Recommended Retail Price $71.50
ISBN 9780975196779
Order from the Institute or Federation
Press

Imprisoning
Resistance:
Life and Death in an Australian Supermax
by Bree
Carlton
RRP $49.95
(incl gst) ISBN 9780975196755
29
October 2007
marks twenty years since the death of five prisoners
in a protest and fire in the infamous Jika Jika high-security
unit. This book resurrects these events and invites us to
learn urgent lessons in our current age of supermax and
privatised prisons, detention of asylum seekers and the
controversial use of indefinite detention under the banner
of a 'war on terror'.
Imprisoning
Resistance provides an experiential account of
life and death in the controversial Pentridge Prison Jika
Jika High-Security Unit in Victoria during the 1980s. One
of Australia's first hi-tech supermax prisons, Jika Jika
was designed to house and manage the system's 'worst of
the worst' prisoners. Several years of deaths in custody,
multiple escapes, assaults, murders, prisoner campaigns
and protests, hunger strikes and allegations of prison staff
brutality escalated in 1987 to a dramatic protest fire that
resulted in the deaths of five prisoners. The prison was
closed and a series of inquiries were commissioned. Bree
Carlton revisits this uncomfortable past and reconstructs
events leading up to and surrounding the fire and deaths,
while critically analysing official responses to the discreditable
episodes, crises and deaths that plagued Jika Jika.
"Carlton's
account takes us inside one of Australia's first and most
notorious high tech maximum security units, Jika Jika. Meticulous
research combined with a keen grasp of narrative gives an
intimate and moving account of the human costs of sensory
deprivation and isolation as the dynamics of power and resistance
spiral inexorably towards a protest fire that killed five
men. The struggle for truth and justice contained within
provides insight into the official tactics that seek to
rationalise inhumane and brutalising conditions as reasonable
and necessary. Although Jika Jika was officially declared
a 'human zoo' and closed twenty years ago the lessons to
be learned from its history remain acutely important today."
Associate Professor Jude McCulloch, Monash University
"Bree
Carlton provides a vivid and disturbing account of institutionalised
violence, intensifying and deteriorating relationships between
prisoners and custodial officers, systemic justifications
and excuses for deaths in custody, and the ways in which
various voices are represented in media and official discourses.
It is a profoundly moving piece of work that enables the
reader to understand, and to feel, the issues, and to better
understand the human dimension of the prison experience."
Professor Rob White, University of Tasmania
Institute
of Criminology Series No 25 2007
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Forthcoming
Publications
Bin
Laden In the Suburbs: Criminalising the Arab Other
Second Edition
Edited by Scott Poynting, Greg Noble, Paul Tabar &
Jock Collins
Lines
in the Sand:
The Cronulla Riots and the Limits of Australian Multiculturalism
Edited by Greg Noble
To
be published in early 2009
| Sydney
Institute of Criminology Series |
You
can download a document containing short descriptions
of the most recent books in our series (pdf
file)
Click the image to go to
a brief description

Book
No 1
Aboriginal Perspectives on Criminal Justice
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Book
No 2
Doing Less Time: Penal Reform in Crisis
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Book
No 3
Psychiatry in Court: The Use(fulness) of Psychiatric
Reports and Psychiatric Evidence in Court Proceedings
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Book
No 4
The Man in White is Always Right: Cricket and
the Law |

Book
No 5
The Prison and the Home |

Book
No 6
Women, Male Violence and the Law |
Book
No 7
Fault in Homicide |

Book
No 8
Anatomy of a French Murder Case |

Book
No 9
Gender, Race and international Relations: Violence
Against Filipino Women in Australia |

Book
No 10
Reform in Policing: Lessons from the Whitrod
Era |

Book
No 11
A Culture of Corruption: Changing an Australian
Police Service |

Book
No 12
Defining Madness |

Book
No 13
Developing Cultural Criminology: Theory &
Practice in Papua New Guinea |

Book
No 14
Indigenous Human Rights |

Book
No 15
When Police Unionise |

Book
No 16
Regulating Racism |

Book
No 17
A History of Criminal Law in New South Wales:
The Colonial Period 1788 - 1900 |

Book
No 18
Bin Laden in the suburbs:
criminalising the Arab Other |

Book
No 19
Global Issues, Women and Justice |

Book
No 20
Separated: Aboriginal Childhood Separations
and Guardianship Law |

Book
No 21
Refugees and State Crime
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Book
No 23
Interrogating Images:
Audio-visually
recorded police questioning of suspects
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If
you would like to purchase a book in the Institute
of Criminology Series please contact the Institute
or:info@federationpress.com.au
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