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Attitudes to Punishment in Two High-Crime Communities (From Alternatives to Prison: Options for an Insecure Society, P 366-405, 2004, Anthony Bottoms, Sue Rex, et al. eds. -- See NCJ-210129)

NCJ Number
210143
Author(s)
Anthony Bottoms; Andrew Wilson
Date Published
2004
Length
40 pages
Annotation
In this chapter, a study was conducted on how residents of high crime communities view the offenders who live in their community.
Abstract
This chapter presents the results of an empirical research study commissioned by the Coulsfield Committee exploring the issue of communities with high crime rates also being areas where many known offenders live, and specifically how residents of high crime communities view the offenders who live in their communities. Two areas of Sheffield were chosen, both of which are high-crime, high-offender rate communities with high social deprivation. A formal survey was conducted of a small sample of the general adult population in each area, to ascertain in a structured way their opinions on appropriate punishments and other issues. The results have a policy significance indicating reasonable public support for the idea that offenders should be allowed opportunities to redeem themselves. Tables, notes, and references