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127 |
Introduction. Christopher Murphy and Philip Stenning.
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| 131 |
Disenchanted criminology. Jean-Paul Brodeur.
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| 137 |
Risk society and actuarial criminology: Prospects for a critical discourse. George Rigakos.
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| 151 |
In defence of liberal models of research and policy. Don Clairmont.
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| 161 |
New possibilities for a feminism "in" criminology? From dualism to diversity. Elizabeth Comack.
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| 171 |
Then and now: Federal support for justice research. Gerald Woods.
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| 179 |
Implications of public service reform for criminal justice research and policy in Canada. Philip Stenning.
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| 191 |
On the fragmentation of Canadian criminal justice history. Russell Smandyh and Bryan Hogeveen.
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| 205 |
The current and future state of police research and policy in Canada. Christopher Murphy.
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| 217 |
Youth justice research in Canada: An assessment. Anthony Doob.
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| 225 |
Sentencing research in Canada. Julian Roberts.
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| 235 |
Corrections research in Canada: Impressive progress and promising prospects. James Bonta and Robert Cormier.
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| 249 |
The impact of aboriginal justice research on policy: A marginal past and an even more uncertain future. Carol LaPrairie.
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| 261 |
A Northern taboo: Research on race, crime and criminal justice in Canada. Scot Wortley.
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| 275 |
A persistent paradox: Drug research and policy in Canada. Patricia Erickson.
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| 285 |
Discipline in dissent: Canadian academic criminology at the millennium. Robert Menzies and Dorothy E. Chunn.
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| 299 |
La criminologie au Québec: 1960 - 1999. André Normandeau and Maurice Cusson.
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| 311 |
Reinventing intellectuals. Jennifer Wood and Clifford Shearing.
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| 321 |
Concluding thoughts. Philip Stenning and Christopher Murphy.
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| 249 |
RCJ-Net - Res-RCJ. Irving Kulik.
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| 329 |
Instructions to Authors
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